Jodi Picoult knows her audience
Relevant offers
Jodi Picoult knows her audience. She tends to write family dramas that tug at the heartstrings. Her books have short chapters, usually written from the perspective of the main characters, and often have a surprise ending.
Her latest book, House Rules, sticks to this winning formula.
The story focuses on Emma, a single mom with two teenage boys. Her older son is Jacob, 18, who has Asperger's syndrome, a form of autism.
Jacob takes comments at face value, hates the colour orange and schedules his days around his favourite TV procedural crime show. He has memorized dialogue from movies to insert into conversation when needed.
When Emma confronts Jacob about an altercation with a teacher, he responds, "You can't handle the truth," a line from Jack Nicholson's 1992 film A Few Good Men.
Emma has rearranged her life to care for Jacob. She prepares meals according to the colours he likes. On Monday, he eats green foods. On Tuesday, the colour of the food is red, and so on. She can barely afford the bills for his medications and supplements.
The other family member affected by Jacob's condition is 15-year-old Theo, who is tired of making allowances for his brother. Theo desperately wants to live a normal life with a normal family. He dreams of having two parents, a big house and a brother who doesn't have special needs.
Then the family is turned upside-down. Jacob's tutor is found murdered, and he is accused of killing her. Emma can no longer shield him from life's harsh realities.
House Rules is a compelling mystery with heart. It won't disappoint Picoult's fans, and it should keep new readers engaged.
- AP
Sponsored links
Wellington gears up for Homegrown
The awesomeness of the alchemical
PS Vita lives life to the fullest
Frizzell and Hunt team up for exhibition
Dirty, sleazy, crazy prostitution
Deirdre Tarrant to leave Footnote
All shipshape for art deco extravaganza
Lying celebrities are surprisingly bearable
Welly director awaits three little boys
Ngaio quake-prone classrooms closed
Hurricanes fight back to beat Chiefs
New artificial pitch planned for Kilbirnie
Student wins top dollar for top marks
Bolivian squirrel monkeys arrive at Wellington Zoo
Lloyd Morrison gets Town Hall funeral
Goodman Fielder to slash New Zealand jobs
$25k Sevens costume comp to return
Wellington start-up wins Webstock award
Reasons for visa denials to be kept secret
Cook Strait swim crossing today
Kiwi sales put sparkle back in jeweller
West Australian to wear gloves for Firebirds
Are you worried about a big earthquake in Wellington?