I wasn't quite sure what to expect when I started reading this other than Susie was murdered. I was a little disappointed that the murderer is never caught, she says that Mr Harvey can feel the spirits of the murdered girls and I was half expecting him to either confess to relieve the guilt or commit suicide.
I was little confused at the snapshots chapter, I wasn't sure if this was meant to be a flashback or a way to move the storyline ahead.
I agree with everyone, when Susie takes over Ruth's body it was just weird. I think what made it weirder for me was that it was at the site of where her body was dumped.
I'm a huge fan of police dramas and crime mysteries, so the police work in Sebold's story seemed very amateur. I guess considering the time frame of the crime this was probably realistic, but it seemed that the detectives, especially Len, didn't want to believe Jack that it could be the crazy old man that can't remember his wife's name.
I think that Sebold had to add Mr Harvey as a character for the story to happen the way it did. If Mr Harvey wasn't a character, you wouldn't have Jack knowing that he was the murderer and trying to prove it, and everyone thinking he was crazy including his wife and the lead detective. This character needed to be added so that Lindsay could have that moment when she realized that her father was right, so that they could bond. Granted, Sebold could've killed off the character sooner, since you're right she doesn't really follow him except to tell us that he's killed more.
The romance between Len and Abigail wasn't believable at all, there wasn't any passion or take your breath away moments, that I'd expect to see with an affair, just more of a "he's kind of interesting" perspective from Abigail. Susie's experience in Ruth's body was more believable than her mother's affair with Len. I think this affair was just a way for Abigail to regain some confidence, to allow her to know that she was still attractive and men wanted her. I think that if Len had rejected her, she wouldn't have left, but him allowing her to seduce him allowed her to be empowered sexually. I hated the part where grandma is telling Abigail about her father's affair and it goes in one ear and out the other. You could tell reading that the grandma was a very proud person, and this showed her weakness, and Abigail doesn't even listen! I think this was the point that I really started liking the grandma's character.
All in all the book, for me, kept me interested enough to finish, but had some disappointments. I've heard that the movie is quite a bit different, so I think I'll have to watch to see for myself.
I was little confused at the snapshots chapter, I wasn't sure if this was meant to be a flashback or a way to move the storyline ahead.
I agree with everyone, when Susie takes over Ruth's body it was just weird. I think what made it weirder for me was that it was at the site of where her body was dumped.
I'm a huge fan of police dramas and crime mysteries, so the police work in Sebold's story seemed very amateur. I guess considering the time frame of the crime this was probably realistic, but it seemed that the detectives, especially Len, didn't want to believe Jack that it could be the crazy old man that can't remember his wife's name.
But ask yourself this, what if the Mr Harvey character was never introduced and the kill-scene wasn't in the book at all. You would still have the elbow, the hat, the blood in the field, everything to link her being missing to be being murdered and all of the unknown and open-endedness that comes with that. Susie is still narrating from heaven, the family still struggles with the day-to-day strife of moving on and all Susie has say when mentioning him is "her murderer" as she already does. Then you would have a book that is more about "life, immersed in sudden death" which I agree is ultimately what Sebold was trying to achieve here. But by adding the element of the murderer as a character that you follow (I use that word loosely as you hardly follow him at all after the murder) throughout the book, it becomes more than just about the family and friends trying to cope with the sudden loss of a teenage girl.
I think that Sebold had to add Mr Harvey as a character for the story to happen the way it did. If Mr Harvey wasn't a character, you wouldn't have Jack knowing that he was the murderer and trying to prove it, and everyone thinking he was crazy including his wife and the lead detective. This character needed to be added so that Lindsay could have that moment when she realized that her father was right, so that they could bond. Granted, Sebold could've killed off the character sooner, since you're right she doesn't really follow him except to tell us that he's killed more.
The romance between Len and Abigail wasn't believable at all, there wasn't any passion or take your breath away moments, that I'd expect to see with an affair, just more of a "he's kind of interesting" perspective from Abigail. Susie's experience in Ruth's body was more believable than her mother's affair with Len. I think this affair was just a way for Abigail to regain some confidence, to allow her to know that she was still attractive and men wanted her. I think that if Len had rejected her, she wouldn't have left, but him allowing her to seduce him allowed her to be empowered sexually. I hated the part where grandma is telling Abigail about her father's affair and it goes in one ear and out the other. You could tell reading that the grandma was a very proud person, and this showed her weakness, and Abigail doesn't even listen! I think this was the point that I really started liking the grandma's character.
All in all the book, for me, kept me interested enough to finish, but had some disappointments. I've heard that the movie is quite a bit different, so I think I'll have to watch to see for myself.