- By Jodi Picoult
This was a random pick which was on my to-read list for sometime now. I usually shun away from Jodi Picoult novels as they are not my usual cup of tea. Having said that, reading Leaving time has been a fabulous experience, albeit an emotional one.
Alice is a scientist, researching elephant herds and studying their empathy responses, primarily grief, in an elephant sanctuary, along with her husband Thomas. Thomas owns the sanctuary and has three employees - Gideon, Grace and Nevvie. One night, Nevvie is found dead, trampled by an Elephant and Alice is severely injured. Alice is rushed to the hospital, from which she disappears on the same night. Thomas is institutionalized in a traumatic turn of events, leaving Jenna, a three year old, in the care of her grand mother.
Ten years later, a thirteen year old Jenna is obsessed about finding the truth of her mother's disappearance. In the quest for truth, Jenna methodically searches the missing person's list and unclaimed Jane Doe's on the internet every night. When the searches have been futile, in a desperate attempt, she seeks out a psychic, Serenity, who once specialized in missing persons. Serenity, though was not very keen on finding the truth, on the happen chance of finding Alice's wallet in the elephant sanctuary, close to the site of where Alice was found, she signs up for finding the truth about Alice. Jenna, however, does not want to leave the chance of finding her mother purely to a psychic, who needs visions to find answers. So she hunts down the investigative officer, Virgil, who was working the case on the night of her mother's disappearance and is thrilled to see that he is now a private detective. She approaches him to enlist his services in finding Alice.
The rest of the story, told from varying perspectives of Alice, Jenna, Serenity, Virgil, interlaced with life in an Elephant sanctuary, is an emotional ride in search for answers. In a captivating tale of intrigue, Jodi Picoult leaves no stone unturned to engage the reader. The Elephants in this novel are as much a part of the story, as every other character in the novel and reading about them has been a fascinating, though elaborate experience. And the ending? I did NOT see that one coming. I had to go back and re-read it, to make sure I read it right. And just on the off-chance that I misread it again, I read it, AGAIN and sure, I still did not see that ending in my wildest imaginations. While this is a well executed story, it saddened me.
In her own words: "The moral of this story is that no matter how much we try, no matter how much we want it … some stories just don’t have a happy ending."
In case you are picking this up, do read it on a weekend, with a day to spare, to get over the emotional gut-wrenching this novel seems to unload. And if you happen to be the sort of reader who gets into the heads of characters, like me, do keep some tissues handy!! Don't say I did not warn you!!
Happy reading, fella readers!
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