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The Courage Tree (2002)

The Courage Tree (2002)

Book Info

Genre
Rating
3.89 of 5 Votes: 1
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ISBN
1551668696 (ISBN13: 9781551668697)
Language
English
Publisher
mira books

About book The Courage Tree (2002)

A quick glance through the various reviews of this book would probably have made me think twice about bothering to read it, so I'm glad I didn't look it up before I downloaded it- I had read (and re-read) one of Chamberlain's other books, The Secret Life of CeeCee Wilkes, saw her name and bought the book. It was a good decision and I'd recommend you do the same. It isn't the most well-written book I've read, in that the characters aren't highly developed, but I think this lends itself to the story rather well- the reader is in the position of a member of the public in a missing-child case; the parents, grandparents and family friends are relevant, but the viewer doesn't feel the need to analyse them and learn all about their childhood in order to understand why they are the way they are. The important thing is the search, the result of the search, and how they feel about the search, and in this respect, Chamberlain comes up trumps: told from a variety of perspectives, the story of Sophie's disappearance, her illness and the search for her move along at a pace comparable to watching the story unfold on the nightly news- at times things are fast-moving, with new twists and turns on almost every page, and at other times nothing seems to be happening, and the reader is filled with the same sense of waiting for an inevitable outcome as they would be if watching these events unfold on television. In summary, I enjoyed this book, and I think Chamberlain achieved an impressive sense of realism. I couldn't put it down, and will certainly be reading more of Diane Chamberlain's work in the future... though I might have to impose stricter limits on myself as I've read this book through the night!

I've heard such great things about this author and that she is compared to Jodi Picoult (whose books are a guilty pleasure of mine). Add to the equation that I am a WVa native and love to read books from my home state. So with all these expectations laying on this book's paperback cover, I was excited to crack open this title!But it fell flat. My main beef is with Janine. Oh, how the book mentions so many times that she was a teenage rebel. Then she serves in the Persian Gulf war. How did that spunky girl turn into such a spineless whimp of a woman? Her parents had no character development. They are bullies and annyoing. Joe is more of a jerk than he ever is a good guy, so there was no liking him either. Lucas is shrouded in so much mystery that it's the end of the book until you can decide if you are going to like him or not. Then there's the parallel story line, with Zoe being the same weak woman and so your only strong female lead is left up to Paula. Paula and Sophie are probably the only two characters I had any empathy for. Zoe's daughter Marti is a psychopath and has no development at all.Most of the characters felt to me stereotypical and flat. Midway through the book I figured out the mystery to Lucas so then I kept waiting for the story to pick up the pace, for more excitement to grace the pages, for me to feel something! But it just didn't have any real spark for me. I have another book from this author so I'll give her another try. But so far I am disappointed. I gave this title a 3-star rating because I did finish the book. But it's not one I'll keep around to read again.

Do You like book The Courage Tree (2002)?

Giving this book Five Stars! This read was amazingly intriguing that grips you from beginning to end. Janine wants to give her 8 year old daughter Sophie a normal life to live as she suffers from a rare disease and needs constant care. The nightmare begins when Janine allows Sophie to go on a camping trip and she doesn't return from it. Each day Sophie is out there missing is another day a danger for her health. This is where the suspense starts...it left me surprised with it's twists and turns. This book takes on two stories which are cleverly merged together. All the characters were engaging and grew as the story continued, they just seemed so real especially Janine's character, which was well-written. I loved her strength and dedication in finding her daughter, it was heartbreaking as well as inspiring. I honestly found this book very hard to put down as it was EXCELLENT! Something else i loved about it was the sweet little story behind the title of the book, The Courage Tree. For me this read was emotional, moving, satisfying and gripping. Diane Chamberlain is a true storyteller. I end this by saying there is nothing better than a good book when you need one and one this absorbing, it makes the hours spent reading totally worth it.
—Gurdeep Assi

The Courage Tree is the story of two mothers, each trying in their own ways to protect their daughters, and realising that the protection they're trying to give maybe not what is needed. Diane Chamberlain intertwines two main stories, with lots of sub-plots that are all neatly tied together at the end.It was okay.Don't get me wrong - this isn't a BAD book. It's relatively well constructed, and the characters are likeable and (mostly) believable. There's a certain amount of suspense, particularly through the beginning half of the book, and it was compelling enough for me to keep reading.It was all a bit... too neat, though. Everything tied together so perfectly at the end that it feels uncomfortable. Too unlikely (the epilogue too saccharine for words.) I couldn't quite believe it all.It's along the same sort of lines as Jodi Picoult - that almost seems to be a genre/style in its own right these days. Diane Chamberlain is one of those authors that people say: "if you like Jodi Picoult, you'll like her." And I get that, I do. But, actually, this book seemed like a sub-standard version of a Jodi Picoult book. Maybe it would be better without the comparison?A fine read - but nothing really special, overly melodramatic.
—E

Wow, another fantastic novel by Diane Chamberlain - this book was particularly masterful at creating suspense, hope and belief around every corner. I felt such hatred toward Janine's mother throughout most of the book, and almost as much for her father...I was up and down about how I felt about Joe, Janine's ex-husband, but mostly I understood him, even when I was upset by his actions or words, I understood where he was coming from....I was able to feel his pain and his love and his anger....and Joe always redeemed himself, able to be reasonable which was much more than I could say for Janine's parents. And Janine - wow, such love, such hope, such belief. And Sophie - ahhh, I was so in love with sweet little Sophie....and Lucas! - I think there was more suspense around Lucas than around finding the missing Sophie. I never wanted to believe in someone so much as I wanted to believe in Lucas...I really liked him and wanted everyone to be wrong about him. I've said before with Ms. Chamberlain's books, that she is genius at creating characters with depth...and she is ! and whether the reader likes the characters or not seems irrelevant because the reader will FEEL something about or for the characters....she connects the characters to the reader in a way not many authors that I have read have accomplished with such strength. Definitely one of my favourites - and one I would read again !
—TamElaine

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