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Atria Books

Vanishing Acts

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New York Times bestselling author Jodi Picoult is widely acclaimed for her ability to tap into the hearts and minds of real people. Now she explores what happens when a young woman's past--a past she didn't even know she had--catches up to her just in time to threaten her future.

How do you recover the past when it was never yours to lose?

Delia Hopkins has led a charmed life. Raised in rural New Hampshire by her beloved, widowed father, she now has a young daughter, a handsome fiancΓ©, and her own search-and-rescue bloodhound, which she uses to find missing persons. But as Delia plans her wedding, she is plagued by flashbacks of a life she can't recall...until a policeman knocks on her door, revealing a secret about herself that changes the world as she knows it--and threatens to jeopardize her future.

WithΒ Vanishing Acts, Jodi Picoult explores how life--as we know it--might not turn out the way we imagined; how the people we've loved and trusted can suddenly change before our very eyes; how the memory we thought had vanished could return as a threat. Once again, Picoult handles an astonishing and timely topic with understanding, insight, and compassion.

Book Details

ISBN: 

9780743454551

EAN: 

9780743454551

Binding: 

Paperback

Pages: 

448

Authors: 

Jodi Picoult

Publisher: 

Atria Books

Published Date: 2005-15-11

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Customer Reviews

Based on 20 reviews
40%
(8)
30%
(6)
20%
(4)
5%
(1)
5%
(1)
J
Jeanne Anderson
Love this Author

Once again Jodi Picoult does not disappoint me. She can write about real life family situations with such a reality you feel the characters.This about a child who is "kidnapped" by her father and does not know about it until 28 years later when he is arrested for the crime.It delves into her life now, before and after. There are so many lies and situations that are hard to comprehend.Ms Picoult writes from everybodys perspective. The daughter, father, mother, lawyer, boyfriend,lover, grandchild. They all play a part and have their story. You learn about the courtroom procedure and how one survives prison and many other unbelievable and real situations.Once again, I loved a Jodi Picoult book. I only wish there had been a little less written about the Indian lady Delia meets in Arizona. 5 stars for the rest!!!!!

M
Mary Towns
Jodi Picout scores again

I enjoyed My Sisters Keeper and would recommend it along with Vanishing Acts. Both books deal with current events that should be food for thought for everyone. Vanishing Acts deals with issues such as alcoholism, recovery from alcoholism, parents kidnapping their own children, problems with today's prisons, information on gang related violence, drug related activities, and child abuse. I would like to give Ms. Picout six stars for this book and for her interest in problems that are now happening in today's society. The story unfolds as a mystery with twists and turns on every page. I couldn't put it down for wondering what I would do if I was in any one of the character's positions. I loved the ending, because the heroine is offered several different choices. (I don't want to spoil the ending, but I rather wondered which choice she will make....Would the the choice she made solve her family problems or just recreate them again?). Jodi Picout is definately a genius and is one of my favorite authors.

J
Jana L.Perskie
"Recollections are in the eyes of the beholder."

Cordelia Hopkins makes a living finding lost people. She and her beautiful bloodhound, Greta, have a terrific track record for leading successful search-and-rescue missions. They're very good at what they do. As "Vanishing Acts" progresses, it becomes obvious that Delia has had an unusually intense interest in loss, of both people and memory, stemming from her third year of life.Raised by her warm and loving father, Andrew, Delia had as happy a childhood as anyone could wish for. Her dad, a widower, was always right there for her. She could talk to him about anything...and she still can, she believes. Sometimes, she would think about what it would be like to have a mother and fantasize about meeting her in heaven. Her mom died in a car crash when she was a small child. On the other hand, it seems to Cordelia that she and her father have lived forever in the same cozy house in rural New Hampshire, just the two of them. He has run a local senior center there for as long as she can remember, and has always been active in community affairs. Although she has vague memories of a woman who smelled of vanilla and apples, Delia remembers almost nothing of her life prior to Wexton, NH.Her two next door neighbors are her two best friends and have been for most of her thirty-two years. She grew up with both of them. Eric Talcott, her fiance, is the father of her pre-school daughter, Sophie. They are in the process of planning their wedding. Fitzwilliam MacMurray, (Fitz), formed the other part of their triumvirate from the time they were little kids. They were a "fungible" trio, as Fitz once put it. In high school, when Eric and Delia fell in love, the three-way friendship continued and still does, years later. Eric is now a lawyer, and Fitz a journalist.As Sophie grows from a toddler to little girl, Delia begins to remember more about her own life at her daughter's age. Images, sounds, the feel of the sun on her head, bring back fragmented memories from another time - people, voices and a place she just cannot identify. Then one evening a policeman knocks on the door with a warrant for her father's arrest, and her life and world are turned upside down."Vanishing Act" is written in the first person by each of five main characters: Delia, Andrew, Eric, Fitz, and Elise. Each point of view provides part of the puzzle that is the history of the Hopkins' family. I am a big fan of the author's and have never disliked any of her novels. There are some books by Jodi Picoult which I love, and others I would prefer not to read twice. "Vanishing Acts" is in the latter category, and is probably the book I like least by Ms. Picoult. The narrative feels forced, even erratic at times, and disturbs the natural flow which usually marks the author's work. She has added unwarranted drama, which fits neither the storyline nor the characters. There are scenes from prison life that, although fascinating, are tremendously distracting and excessively violent - to no purpose. Certain characters, dialogue and scenarios are just out of place and make an otherwise believable plot incredible. Unnecessary touches, like change of font and the use of boldface type to distinguish between characters' stories and chapters, are also awkward. It is as if the author could not count on the strength of her plot and storytelling ability to sustain the novel, and needed to go for the artsy effect to provide a worthy result.On the other hand, there are people who surface here, like the Native American woman, Ruthann, who is a jewel of a character - and a prime example of what Jodi Picoult fans look for when we purchase her novels without a second's thought. I am glad I read the book. I would have been sorry to miss it. However, read parts of it in a bookstore before you decide to make a purchase. Otherwise, wait for it to come out in paperback or go to the library.JANA

S
Svetlana
Quick delivery

Good price and condition. Good story!

A
AshleyJ
No Autograph!

I am only giving this 2 stars because I LOVE Jodi Picoult’s work. It was advertised as being autographed, and it was not.