Ratings105
Average rating3.9
I have been an avid fan of Jodi Picoult since I read ‘My Sisters Keeper' about 2 years ago. Some I have loved, others I have struggled my way through but from the moment I read the synopsis of Ninteen Minutes inside the dust jacket of the hardback book I have been looking forward to this one.
As a parent with 2 young children this book really stayed with me, even days after I had finished it I found myself contemplating what their futures held for them at school, will they be like Peter - ostrecised and ridiculed, bullied perhaps daily, will they follow Josie's path - never quite feeling like they fit in but just trying to get by. What impact will this have upon their lives now and in the future.
No matter how you look at it this book talks about what for many children is a reality - waking up every day afraid of what faces you at school and a desperate desire to get by.
Woven throughout this book are the viewpoints of people including Peters lawyer, his parents, survivors of his attack on the high school, parents of victims and also Peter's own viewpoint - how can you not listen to his plea of ‘They started it!' without your conscience pricking you just a little.
I struggled to put this book down - by far the most emotional of Jodi's books since My Sisters Keeper and now a firm favourite.