when Your Son Can’t Look You In The Eye . . . Does That Mean He’s Guilty?
jacob Hunt Is A Teen With Asperger’s Syndrome. He’s Hopeless At Reading Social Cues Or Expressing Himself Well To Others, Though He Is Brilliant In Many Ways. But He Has A Special Focus On One Subject—forensic Analysis. A Police Scanner In His Room Clues Him In To Crime Scenes, And He’s Always Showing Up And Telling The Cops What To Do. And He’s Usually Right.
but When Jacob’s Small Hometown Is Rocked By A Terrible Murder, Law Enforcement Comes To Him. Jacob’s Behaviors Are Hallmark Asperger’s, But They Look A Lot Like Guilt To The Local Police. Suddenly The Hunt Family, Who Only Want To Fit In, Are Directly In The Spotlight. For Jacob’s Mother, Emma, It’s A Brutal Reminder Of The Intolerance And Misunderstanding That Always Threaten Her Family. For His Brother, Theo, It’s Another Indication Why Nothing Is Normal Because Of Jacob.
and Over This Small Family, The Soul-searing Question Looms: Did Jacob Commit Murder?
the Washington Post – Maureen Corrigan
throughout The Long Unfolding Of house Rules, Picoult Keeps So Many Storyline Streamers Whirling In The Air That It Would Be Easy Just To Praise Her Technical Mastery. But Though The Multiple Plots And Narrators Are, Indeed, Adroitly Managed, What Most Readers Will Cherish Is The Character Of Jacob Hunt, An 18-year-old High School Student With Asperger”s Syndrome…picoult”s Depiction Of Jacob And His Family Is Complex, Compassionate And Smart…but, Again, It”s Jacob Who Will Linger With Readers. Desperate To Connect With Other People And Yet Hampered In His Ability To Do So, He Is Painfully Glassed Off From The World Of His Peers, As Well As From Most Adults. Picoult”s Superb Novel Makes Us Inhabit Jacob”s Solitude And Abide His Yearning.
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.