It took me a while to read this book, after many recommendations from one of my cousins. I don’t know where to find the time to read these days, so it took me a while to finish reading this one. Unlike P.S.: I Love You by Cecilia Ahern, I actually love this book. Here’s my favourite passage from the book, and hopefully I won’t get in trouble for publishing this one. :S
Here’s my question: What age are you when you’re in Heaven? I mean, if it’s Heaven, you should be at your beauty-queen best, and I doubt that all the people who die of old age are wandering around toothless and bald. It opens up a whole additional realm of questions, too. If you hang yourself, do you walk around all gross and blue, with your tongue spitting out of your mouth? If you are killed in a war, do you spend eternity minus the leg that got blown up by a mine?
I figure that maybe you get a choice. You fill out the application form that asks you if you want a star view or a cloud view, if you like chicken or fish or manna for dinner, what age you’d like to be seen as by everyone else. Like me, for example, I might pick seventeen, in the hopes I grow boobs by then, and even if I’m a pruny centegenarian by the time I die, in Heaven I’d be young and pretty.
Once at a dinner party I heard my father say that even though he was old old old, in his heart he was twenty-one. So maybe there is a place in your life you wear out like a rut, or even better, like the soft spot on the couch. And no matter what else happens to you, you come back to that.
The problem, I suppose, is that everyone’s different. What happens in Heaven when all these people are trying to find each other after so many years spent apart? Say that you die and start looking around for your husband, who died five years ago. What if you’re picturing him at seventy, but he hit his groove and sixteen and is wandering around suave as can be?
Or what if you’re Kate, and you die at sixteen, but in Heaven you choose to look thirty-five, an age you never got to be here on Earth. How would anyone be able to find you?
It is a very good read. You can buy a copy of Jodi Piccoult’s My Sister’s Keeper here. ;)

I have two favourite Jodi Picoult books: My Sister’s Keeper and The Pact. Both heart-breaking.
Whatever you do, DO NOT watch the film adaptation of My Sister’s Keeper. Too much was left out or changed, it didn’t feel like it was a film based on the book. Of course, that’s only my opinion…
Yes, I read and heard that the movie’s ending is completely different. I’m rather curious, though.. So I might be watching it, maybe when I forget the book’s details. Haha.