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llsburg 's review for:

The Book of Two Ways by Jodi Picoult
5.0

Many reviewers on this site complain about the academic detail in this book. That aspect is exactly what makes it such a rich story to me. I will admit, however, that I am not familiar with the widely famous Jodi Picoult and that this is the only novel of hers that I have read. (Having read synopses of her other books, I think I somehow chose the one out of thirty that I would actually enjoy the most.)

Oh the Egyptology research! Mythology, pictography, technology, technique, bureaucracy, environment: Picoult actually went on a dig so she could write about the experience. I learned from this book that ancient Egyptians had pet dogs and cats; they would name their dogs but called every cat simply "Cat" ("Mau"). I adore that detail! "The Book of Two Ways" is an actual coffin text meant to guide the spirit in the afterlife on one of two pathways, water or land. Picoult took that concept and ran with it.

...and then mashed it up with quantum physics - Schrödinger's Mau, anyone? - and then gave the main character two different but equally viable paths and love interests. Picoult then takes the reader on a sequentially obfuscated journey:
SpoilerAre there two parallel time lines? It sure seems like it until the very end!
So artfully done!

I enjoyed all of the characters. The main character, Dawn Edelstein, is an Egyptology grad student turned death doolah! Both careers are so interesting and so deeply described. The narrative takes room to gently talk about the process of death and the point of life (who we love, what we decide, who remembers us, etc.). Dawn has an overweight teenage daughter, and that's precious too. Oddly, another thing I learned from this book is that "LOL" was once telegraph code for "loss of life" ....lol!

It must be evident that this book excited me. I have so much to say about it and I can't slow down enough to be coherent. Sure there were flaws. I usually find romantic dialogue to be cheesy. And maybe the book had too much going on. Still, I relished all the details and enjoyed parts of the romance. I even felt completely torn between the two men: the husband of 15-years made of sweat and solid rock and the college dreamboat who shares her intellectual passions. Can you really love two people? How painful that would be!
SpoilerAnd then, Picoult leaves Dawn's decision open-ended ... Schrödinger again.


Cutting, insightful prose. "I told him 'I love you.' And I meant it. But it wasn't like flinging open the door of my heart but a statement of fact like 'It's raining.'" ... "I am drawing back the curtain, revealing not just pretty stories but facts: that love can also kill you; that for you to triumph, other people have to be hurt; that the wealth love brings comes at a staggering cost."

This book entertained me, educated me, made me think, made me surprised, made me laugh, made me cry. Death, love, Egypt, muons, cats ... What's not to love?!