The Lovely Bones:
A Novel
by Alice Sebold
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The Lovely
Bones: A Novel
by Alice Sebold
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- Hardcover: 288 pages ; Dimensions (in
inches): 1.12 x 8.50 x 5.70
- Publisher: Little Brown & Company; ISBN:
0316666343; 1st edition (June 2002)
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On her way home from school
on a snowy December day in 1973, 14-year-old Susie Salmon ("like the fish")
is lured into a makeshift underground den in a cornfield and brutally
raped and murdered, the latest victim of a serial killer--the man she
knew as her neighbor, Mr. Harvey.
Alice Sebold's haunting and heartbreaking debut novel, The Lovely
Bones, unfolds from heaven, where "life is a perpetual yesterday"
and where Susie narrates and keeps watch over her grieving family and
friends, as well as her brazen killer and the sad detective working on
her case.
As Sebold fashions it, everyone has his or her own version of heaven.
Susie's resembles the athletic fields and landscape of a suburban high
school: a heaven of her "simplest dreams," where "there were no teachers....
We never had to go inside except for art class.... The boys did not pinch
our backsides or tell us we smelled; our textbooks were Seventeen
and Glamour and Vogue."
The Lovely Bones works as an odd yet affecting coming-of-age
story. Susie struggles to accept her death while still clinging to the
lost world of the living, following her family's dramas over the years
like an episode of My So-Called Afterlife.
Her family disintegrates in their grief: her father becomes determined
to find her killer, her mother withdraws, her little brother Buckley attempts
to make sense of the new hole in his family, and her younger sister Lindsey
moves through the milestone events of her teenage and young adult years
with Susie riding spiritual shotgun.
Random acts and missed opportunities run throughout the book--Susie
recalls her sole kiss with a boy on Earth as "like an accident--a beautiful
gasoline rainbow."
Though sentimental at times, The Lovely Bones is a moving exploration
of loss and mourning that ultimately puts its faith in the living and
that is made even more powerful by a cast of convincing characters.
Sebold orchestrates a big finish, and though things tend to wrap up
a little too well for everyone in the end, one can only imagine
(or hope) that heaven is indeed a place filled with such happy endings.
--Brad Thomas Parsons
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