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Marcia's Reviews > The Pact

The Pact by Jodi Picoult
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did not like it

Why do so many people seem to love/adore Jodi Picoult novels? I gave her a try with My Sister's Keeperand admittedly, I didn't hate it, although I did take issue with the plot. However, The Pact has now completely and successfully put me off all/any Picoult novels.

There are so many reasons why I hated this book; I find it hard to pick one major thing that irritated me. The things I do hate about it are...integral parts of the story.

WARNING. SPOILERS AHEAD. (Not that I even recommend you read this novel. So just read the spoilers.)

I hated the entire premise of the novel. A suicide pact that turns out not to be a suicide pact, but rather a young man helping his girlfriend kill herself??? In some ways, Picoult sullied and insulted the truest nature of love. Chris (the boy involved with the suicide pact) considers it to be true love as he releases his girlfriend Emily from her worldly cares and pain. Is this really what true love is?

Number one -- what message does this send to people with suicidal ideation???

That sometimes our troubles and trials are too great for us to handle, so we must escape into death???

I was shocked by the romanticism of suicide that occurred in this novel. Fair enough, Picoult did *attempt* to show us the repercussions of suicide with friends and family, but the strongest point of the novel was Chris describing (on trial) the death of Emily, his lover.

Number two -- Emily, who had suffered a form of sexual assault at a very young age, never deals with the issue. Now this has been documented and researched, linked to people who are suicidal and it makes complete sense. Often there is some kind of abuse in one's childhood that inevitably leads to depression, self-blame, and sadly suicide.

Picoult didn't offer much about the abuse though, other than a quick reference to it as a glimpse into Emily's life. She manages to hide her depression from her parents and spirals downward, Chris being the only person she confides in.

Throughout the entire second half of the novel, when Emily's slow ascent downward is being explained, I wanted to shake Chris until his teeth rattled. If my boyfriend came to me and said, "I want to kill myself. I'm extremely unhappy because of something but I refuse to tell you why", I would immediately seek therapy for him in ANY WAY POSSIBLE. However, Chris being a naive teenager (what other reason could there be???), does nothing, convincing himself that he can stop Emily before she takes the final step.

Nothing about Emily's abuse becomes apparent to any of the parents. The biggest shocker of the story is that Chris wasn't suicidal at all, that he seemly went along with Emily's plan for some flimsy reason that doesn't hold up under examination.

There is literally nothing about this novel that I liked. What kind of story is this?? I've read many depressing novels, but this one was the worst. What was Picoult attempting to communicate to the reader? That suicide leaves families devastated and tears people apart, but is sometimes inevitable and is the answer to our woes?

Perhaps if she had explored the realm of sexual abuse and sought to show some type of healing...anything...perhaps then the book would have been more palatable to me. However, I very much doubt that, and as you can tell from my review...I give this novel one star because I did NOT like it...I hated it.

Give this book a pass.
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Reading Progress

June 10, 2013 – Started Reading
June 10, 2013 – Shelved
June 10, 2013 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-26 of 26 (26 new)

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AlyeskaFox I agree! If Chris loved her so much, why did he fail to seek help for her? He didn't even have to bring her to therapy himself - he could have just told a parent or teacher.

It could be argued that Chris was just a naive teenager and didn't understand the gravity of the situation, but half this book is spent praising this young couple's incredible maturity, so I think we can throw that argument right out the window =P


message 2: by Joanne (new)

Joanne I agree about Picoult's writing...it is so bleak with very little to redeem it...I always feel tarnished after reading her work so I avoid it now.


Marcia Agree with you guys. Very little pay off on a story supposedly about love.


message 4: by q (new) - rated it 2 stars

q agqq#


Elaine "Chris being the only person she confides in" - she didn't though. She didn't confide in him about the abuse.


Marcia Elaine wrote: ""Chris being the only person she confides in" - she didn't though. She didn't confide in him about the abuse."

Chris being the only one she confides in--about being suicidal.


message 7: by Jane (new) - rated it 1 star

Jane Robinson I am not reading another of her books. I don't care how many she sells.


message 8: by Adib (new)

Adib Usman Completely agree with the review..I hated it too. I kept thinking there must be something really profound to come. But turns out all that happens is that Emily is depressed and chris who supposedly loves her a whole lot doesn't do anything except help her die. Wtf!! Everyone in the novel kept harping on about how "mature" their relationship was, so why wouldn't he atleast try to get her help?

I really don't know what the message of the novel is. She loves him so much that she leaves him with the burden of her death (and potential accusations to come) rather than atleast trying to heal by seeking help. He loves her so much that he simply helps her die than seeking help. If this is love then god save us all from such "love". And it doesn't even explain many other things properly...why was Emily's mom so hell bent on making sure Chris is punished when she presumably knew the truth (she read the entire journal so it is hinted that she knew the truth). Why does his father refuse to take the stand? I mean it's one thing to want to bury your head in the sand when you do something silly, and quite another to look the other way when your son might get a life sentence. And don't get me started on the jury. They let him off because he told them how much he loved her on the last day of his trial after lying through his teeth the entire way? Looks like everyone in the entire novel needed mental help. All this novel does is glorify suicide in the name of love and put ideas into the head of teenagers that dying or killing is something cool. Why do people love this nonsense so much?


Meghan It is pretty easy in adult hindsight to ask questions about why teenagers would act this way or that; do you remember the play "Romeo and Juliet"?!? Teenage love follows little practicality and is blind. Jodi Picoult writes stories that involve questions of morality and ethics.

This is not a self help book on how to deal with sexual abuse. People that need to feel happy endings and like they have learned something won't be impressed. There is pain in the world and areas of grey and that is what the novel explores.

It does romanticize teen suicide in some ways, that I may admit. I wouldn't tell a young adult to read this. But it is a story that makes you want to turn the page. Jodi always manages that.


Marcia Funny... It made me want to rip the pages out and burn them. The only reason I finished the novel was to enable myself to write a scathing review with a clear conscience of having given the book a chance.


message 11: by Anafreestyler (new)

Anafreestyler Well, I've been hearing a lot about this book lately so I thought I'd give it a try, but not before reading some comments... I'm glad I did, because I don't think it's worth my time. Thanks to the comments of many users I think I realise now why I've always instinctively shied away from Picoult's sappy covers and catchy titles. I have actually read quite a lot of BAD books (I probably should stop listening to advice from people whose emotional maturing stopped somewhere in their tweens), but fool me once...


Marcia Anafreestyler wrote: "Well, I've been hearing a lot about this book lately so I thought I'd give it a try, but not before reading some comments... I'm glad I did, because I don't think it's worth my time. Thanks to the ..."

My rule of thumb is absolutely NO Jodi Picoult and Anita Shreve! I can tolerate Nicholas Sparks but only once in a blue moon. Not gonna waste my time reading dumbed down literature that has been made for the masses. /rantover.


Tina (A Novel Time With Tina) Nineteen Minutes was her best book. That book really had a doozy of an ending. This book was weak, but they aren't all this bad.


message 14: by Marie (new) - rated it 1 star

Marie Thank you. I've just started reading this book and have been questioning if I Evan want to give it my time. I've not been very impressed with it , not in any positive way . I think I'll pass on this one. There are way too many good books to give my time to for me to waste it on something like this.


Meghan I know these are older posts and I’ve already commented, but I want to add that in NO WAY would I compare this or any Jodi Picoult book to something near the same genre as Nicholas Sparks. He writes saccharine love stories! There may have been some sappy teenage love in this book, but in no way is it a sappy love story. It wasn’t my favorite of her books, but it did raise thought provoking issues of suicide and ethics.


Knatia Parson I agree, with this review. The Tenth Circle is one of my favorite books, so I picked up this one. Unlike The Tenth Circle, issues are brought up, but not properly addressed. there's no real mystery, here. There isn't one likable or relatable character, in this book. I agree that the message in The Pact is terrible, and reading it has also stopped me from checking out more of Picoult's books.


Claire I bought this because I’ve read a couple of good ones by her but the only 2 I e detested is this one (got to 10%) and my sisters keeper. I can’t remember the titles if the good ones but one was about an as guard that is in hiding and the Jewish girl he hired during the war who’s a granny now - both living in the same town and they come across each other. Very good. So don’t stop at these as they are both pants. This one in the extreme!


Marin O'brien Completely agree with everything you said. I was too lazy to write all this but you’ve hit the nail on the head.


message 19: by Sara (new) - added it

Sara What I couldn't understand about this book was how everyone kept saying Emily and Chris were like family and then wondering why she wanted to kill herself after ending up pregnant by someone who was though of as a member of the family. They would literally say it all the time during the trial that Chris and Emily were practically brother and sister but no one could connect those dots? Sure the it was finally thought by Gus towards the end but she never actually talked about it to anyone.


message 20: by Emily (new) - rated it 1 star

Emily Ward THANK YOU. Your review totally validates how I felt about this book. Such a horrifying premise, totally triggering to people who struggle with suicidal ideation, and not a love story at all.


Betty I somewhat agree with marcia, but still I gave it three stars for keeping me engrossed. But then in the third in the last third of the book I realized that this is a sappy unbelievable love story. We're talking about two teens who never tell anyone what's going on, which is unbelievable to me. I'm surprised Chris didn't confide in one of his parents or a teacher and it is really odd that they didn't have other friends, except for that one friend of Emily's. That's a red flag for the parents that their kids are rarely with others which is unusual for a teenager. I felt like I was on an emotional roller coaster until I came to the realization that this is an intense love story that doesn't make sense and that it romanticizes suicide and that should be a No-No.


message 22: by Sarah (new) - added it

Sarah This review completely validated why it’s better I leave this at 51% read on my kindle. I got to the part where Emily’s mother destroyed evidence because she would rather her best friend’s son suffer in jail than admit that her daughter chose to kill herself and couldn’t do it anymore. I read Nineteen Minutes and had high hopes for the rest of her work but so far have been left disappointed


Bright Chris considers it love to help someone-his girlfriend, no less- kill herself.
Wow.
Explains a lot about the world we live in.
Great review, Marcia!


Donna Showing the devastation of the family and the boy she loved was the point, I think. It shows exactly why suicide is so selfish.


message 25: by Whitney (new)

Whitney Dahlin It's selfish of you to emotionally manipulate and blackmail someone to stay alive in terrible suffering every single day. Therapy isn't magical. It doesn't cure you. Sometimes it doesn't work at all. Have some empathy. It's frustrating to see you people who have lived such a great life that you can't imagine any justification for suicide, be so judgemental. You guys are judgmental. Some pain and suffering is so terrible and hurts for so long, that life's greatest happiness doesn't compare. People have the right to choose to die. Therapy isn't magic. I hope none of you ever experience suffering like that. Some of us are trapped in our own bodies due to medical issues suffering. Some of us are trapped in our minds haunted and suffering. It's selfish and wrong to demonize people who end themselves.


message 26: by Sherry (new)

Sherry I agree with your first statement, Whitney, after watching my mother suffer way to long with dementia because my sister could not her "go" for purely selfish reasons. I couldn't stand that at Mom's end-of-life and gave her permission to let go in peace because my sister could survive without her with her husband and support from family members. A friend of mine took his own life and I've never judged how much he had to be suffering to do that. His mother found him and I feel for her -- and for the son he didn't find enough to keep him living.


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