Laura Moriarty’s novel, The Rest of Her Life, was a selection of my library book club earlier this summer. The way I have the book club set up, participants vote quarterly for upcoming selections, based on a list garnered from my own suggestions as well as recommendations from the group. Whichever books end up getting the most votes are the ones that are chosen for discussion. I believe what made this book such a popular choice was that its premise sounded very much like something Jodi Picoult would write; indeed, both the front and back of the book’s jacket feature blurbs by Picoult praising the book. However, what made The Rest of Her Life a favorite among my book club members was also what made me more than a little hesitant to read it. Of the two novels I’ve read by Picoult (My Sister’s Keeper and Keeping the Faith), neither was that appealing to me, particularly My Sister’s Keeper, which of course seemingly everyone but me absolutely loves. So it was not without some trepidation that I started reading The Rest of Her Life.
And you know what? It wasn’t that bad. In fact, it was pretty darn good.
Leigh is an English teacher in a small Kansas college town when one day she comes home to find that her life, and the lives of her family, has been irrevocably changed. Her teenage daughter, Kara, has hit and killed a fellow student, 16-year-old Bethany, while driving the family SUV. The effect this has on the family is one that happens to many families when tragedy strikes – it takes any cracks in the family dynamic and splits them wide open. And so it is with Leigh’s family. From the moment she arrives home to see her husband consoling their daughter, the estrangement between Leigh and her daughter grows ever wider and the resentment she feels towards her husband for the close relationship he shares with Kara becomes more and more unbearable, even as he questions Leigh’s love and loyalty to her own daughter.
We see everything in this book from Leigh’s perspective, and that is both the book’s strength and its weakness. Does her husband really not feel any guilt about Bethany’s death, or is that just how Leigh sees it? Is Kara really that repulsed by her mother or is that also Leigh (mis)projecting emotions onto her daughter? There are moments when the family’s love for one another shines clear through the haze of guilt and anger, such as when Leigh defends her daughter against the grief-induced tirade from Bethany’s mother during a chance encounter. But those moments are few and far between, and it is more often that Leigh’s words and actions do not accurately convey her thoughts and emotions, even if she thinks they do, so she finds herself constantly having to explain, defend or apologize to her friends, family and even strangers.
Leigh is a flawed and often unlikable individual, but a credible and sympathetic character. I didn’t find myself questioning whether someone like this could really exist, whether her circumstances were all that authentic in the real world. Rather than taking an extreme situation and making everything and everyone around it also extreme (ala Picoult), Moriarty has her characters and their lives firmly rooted in the real world, muck and all.






















AGHHHH! I didn’t see the word verification…and now my comment is gone….I’m not typing it again….bottom line: I read My Sister’s Keeper and I didn’t like it either. You are not alone!
I feel your pain, Melissa. I’ve had that happen to me, too. I’m having Mike look into other spam filter options but right now this is the best we’ve come up with. Prior to this, even with wordpress spam filters on, I was still having to plow through dozens and dozens of comments a day just to find the few real ones.
Glad to know I’m not alone!
ok…that word verification thing is annoying…the 1st time I posted a comment I didn’t see it and it erased my comment, then I re-typed my comment, did the word verification but it was wrong and once again my comment vanished. I’ m going to try 1 more time then I’m finding another way to share my thoughts….
I read My Sister’s Keeper and I also didn’t like it. I haven’t read another Jodi Picoult since and I don’t plan on it. I liked The 10th Circle, and 19 Minutes was ok, but after My Sister’s Keeper I gave up on Jodi!
I know, that’s the most aggravating thing. If it would just save what you wrote and give you another shot at the verification it wouldn’t be an issue. Thanks for giving it another go! I don’t have any interest in reading any more of her stuff, either, but I probably will end up having to someday – book clubs just seem to love her!
Piccoult is OK, but really doesn’t stray too far from her M.O. and can be manipulative and a little too mainstream for me. Isn’t it nice when you sign and think you are reading something you think you will find ho hum, and are pleasantly surprised?
Yes, Sanday, it’s always a good feeling when a book bests your expectations. All too often I find it’s the opposite situation. And manipulative is a good adjective for Picoult’s writings.
I would be thrilled and honored for you to participate in Rosie’s Riveters! I will put you in the line-up. If you want to e-mail me directly, then I can send you the template, for you to complete and e-mail back to me whenever you have time. My e-mail address is aarti.nagaraju at gmail dot com.
Thanks so much!
Thanks, Aarti! I will get you my answers back as soon as I decide on which woman I want to profile. (decisions, decisions …)
I haven’t finished My Sister’s Keeper – I was glancing through it at the bookstore, but didn’t buy it – but if I get it, it will be through the library. (which says alot, since I usually prefer to own my books!) This one sounds a bit better – as you say, not so extreme in characters – but after reading Stewart O’Nan’s The Lonely Country, I don’t think I want to read any more about teens and death. Not for a little while anyway. The Lonely Country is a ghost story about the result of an accident which kills several teenagers. I found it very good and very moving. Just in case you wanted something a little different!!
Thanks for the reading suggestion, Susan. I’m familiar with Stewart O’Nan but haven’t read any of his stuff yet (Last Night at the Lobster is on my TBR list). I’ll keep that one in mind for future reading and maybe suggest it to the book club.
It’s so hard when someone is compared to another author that you don’t particularly like. More often than not, I write off that new author because of the unappealing association. But I had the same experience as you with this book – I am NOT a Picoult fan, yet decided to try this out. And…I liked it, too!
Hurray, I feel validated now that someone else shares my opinion on Picoult AND this book. And I agree, I’m likely to write off an author when they are compared to or praised by authors I don’t like.