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The Visibles

door Sara Shepard

LedenBesprekingenPopulariteitGemiddelde beoordelingAanhalingen
1088253,425 (3.16)7
This #1 New York Times bestselling author of the "spine-chilling thriller that blurs the lines of fact and fiction" (Mary Kubica, New York Times bestselling author) The Elizas weaves a compelling novel that follows a young woman as she explores how much our genetics influence our future. Summer Davis's deep love for science is the only thing that helps her get through her turbulent journey from adolescent to adulthood. Her mother has abandoned her family, her father's mental illness has overwhelmed him, and her older brother fluctuates between sudden rage and unpredictable tenderness. Summer can't help but question the role of genetics in her life and if she is destined to continue her family's legacy of mental instability. But when she decides to put off a promising science career to take care of her great-aunt Stella--the bedrock of the family and bastion of folksy wisdom, irreverent insight, and Sinatra memorabilia in a less-than-scenic part of the Pennsylvanian countryside--she begins to learn that maybe her DNA doesn't have to define her and that her future belongs to her alone. From the backwoods of Pennsylvania to the brownstones of Brooklyn Heights, The Visibles investigates the secrets of the past, and the hidden corners of our own hearts, to find out whether real happiness is a gift or a choice.… (meer)
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1-5 van 9 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
The only piece of information that Summer Davis takes away from her years at Peninsula Upper School -- one of the finest in the Brooklyn Heights-to-Park Slope radius, to quote the promotional materials -- is the concept that DNA defines who we are and forever ties us to our relatives. A loner by circumstance, a social outcast by nature, and a witty and warm narrator of her own unimaginable chaos by happenstance, Summer hangs on to her interest in genetics like a life raft, in an adolescence marked by absence: her beautiful, aloof mother abandons the family without a trace; her father descends into mental illness, haunted by a lifelong burning secret and abetted by a series of letters that he writes to make sense of his feelings; her best friend Claire drifts out of Summer's life in a breeze of indifference, feigned on both sides; and her older brother fluctuates between irrational fury and unpredictable tenderness in an inaccessible world of his making. Uncertain of her path and unbalanced by conflicting impulses toward hope and escape, Summer stays close to her father while attending college, taking him to electro-shock therapy treatments and trying to make sense of his inscrutable past. Upon his departure for a new and possibly recovered life, Summer begins to question the role of genetics and whether she is destined to live out her family's legacy of despair. But it is only when Summer decides to leave New York herself and put off a promising science career to take care of her great-aunt Stella -- bedrock of the family and bastion of folksy wisdom, irreverent insight, and Sinatra memorabilia in a less-than-scenic part of the Pennsylvanian countryside -- that Summer begins to learn that her biography doesn't have to define her...and that her future, like her DNA, belongs to her alone. In a novel consumed by the uncertainties of science, the flaws of our parents, and enough loss and longing to line a highway, Sara Shepard is a penetrating chronicler of the adolescence we all carry into adulthood: how what happens to you as a kid never leaves you, how the fallibility of your parents can make you stronger, and how being right isn't as important as being wise. From the backwoods of Pennsylvania to the brownstones of Brooklyn Heights, The Visibles investigates the secrets of the past, and the hidden corners of our own hearts, to find out whether real happiness is a gift or a choice.
  DSH-M-Library | Jan 4, 2023 |
I read this book around 3 years ago and the story has still stuck with me.

I was a fan of Shepard's PLL series (which I read before it rose to fame by the tv series) so when I heard she had something different coming out I rushed at the chance.

What I got was a book that ended up helping me in ways I didn't even realize I needed.
To add to the summary blurb at the top Summer has to endure the heartache that is a family falling apart, all on her own. Her other family members are never really present enough to help her through this tough time so she ends up becoming emotionally stilted in her adult life.
At a first glance this book may seem like the coming of age story on how to deal with your crazy family, but it proves you wrong because right between the pages is a whole other story being told.

That was what really made me like this book. It wasn't just one story, it was two weaved together through time. Both seemingly unrelated, but in the final chapters they join forces to reveal a beautifully poignant closing that allows Summer, along with the reader, the help needed in moving past something.

I'll go back to why I loved this book so much.
I myself am a child of divorce and a broken family. At the time of reading this book, I had decided that I accepted the cards I'd been dealt and would be able to move on from the situations at home. I was sad yes, but I was moving on from it.
And then I read this story, and I connected with Summer on the loss she felt, and the stories we kids tell ourselves to make things not seem as bad. It made me realize that I was actively trying to convince myself that I was completely fine, when I hadn't really dealt with it. In a way, this book was there for me during this time, in a way that my other family members, or friends who didn't understand, couldn't be. And I in return felt like I was there for Summer, and her father, and even the lost characters in between.

Okay, so basically, this book means a lot to me. Shepard isn't my favorite author, but I really thank her for writing this book and opening my eyes to another part of myself. ( )
  AnaV93 | Jun 17, 2017 |
Tried, tried and tried again to get into it but I just couldn't. It is confusing and I just couldn't get into the characters or the plot. ( )
  SmithSJ01 | Jan 14, 2011 |
Sarah Shepard is best known for her hit teen series PRETTY LITTLE LIARS. THE VISIBLES is a distinct departure, feeling much closer to the literary world than the world of GOSSIP GIRL. Her protagonist, adolescent Summer Davis, is devastated after her mother abandons the family out of the blue. She becomes obsessed with the concept of DNA, convinced that it is through science that she will one day reconnect with her mother. As Summer grows up, attends college and eventually finds her way to the genetics lab at NYU, it becomes her father that may hold her back, as his battle with mental illness finally reaches a head. THE VISIBLES is an intense, thought-provoking novel, and I look forward to Sarah Shepard's next adult venture. ( )
  EKAnderson | Jan 20, 2010 |
Reasonably Engaging, but Predictable, June 28, 2009


This novel examines a girl's attempts to come to terms with parental abandonment. By thirteen Summer Davis's mother had run off without a trace, and her father was descending into serious mental illness. Summer quickly becomes the adult in a family spiralling out of control. There's not much that I found surprising or unusual about the plot of this book. It is, in fact, quite predictable. Summer's troubled parents shape ways in which she approaches school, career, and relationships. The plot proceeds just as one might expect. The twist Shepard adds to this particular story is Summer's fascination with DNA. She is first introduced to the concept soon after her mother leaves, and Summer spends much of her young adult life pondering the nature vs. nurture debate in light of her particular situation. I found this theme to be contrived, however, as it is only loosely woven into the narrative, and it added little value and effect to the plot. While I found Shepard to be a good writer, I wished the book had been more imaginative. ( )
  lahochstetler | Jun 29, 2009 |
1-5 van 9 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
This book has a totally fabulous cover, but with all that glitter it did give me a false sense of happiness and I was rather blown away by the amount of angst in this novel. And, oh boy, but is there a lot of angst. Well-written angst, yes, but angst nonetheless. I thought if I said the “a” word often enough in my first few sentences, then you might get the picture here … In fact there was so much of the darn stuff that, halfway through, I had to put the book to one side in order to regain enough emotional strength to read the rest of it. Which, for me as a veritable Hard-Hearted Annie, is certainly saying something. It’s also distinctly not a book you want to take on holiday with you, even though it is worth reading ...
 
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This #1 New York Times bestselling author of the "spine-chilling thriller that blurs the lines of fact and fiction" (Mary Kubica, New York Times bestselling author) The Elizas weaves a compelling novel that follows a young woman as she explores how much our genetics influence our future. Summer Davis's deep love for science is the only thing that helps her get through her turbulent journey from adolescent to adulthood. Her mother has abandoned her family, her father's mental illness has overwhelmed him, and her older brother fluctuates between sudden rage and unpredictable tenderness. Summer can't help but question the role of genetics in her life and if she is destined to continue her family's legacy of mental instability. But when she decides to put off a promising science career to take care of her great-aunt Stella--the bedrock of the family and bastion of folksy wisdom, irreverent insight, and Sinatra memorabilia in a less-than-scenic part of the Pennsylvanian countryside--she begins to learn that maybe her DNA doesn't have to define her and that her future belongs to her alone. From the backwoods of Pennsylvania to the brownstones of Brooklyn Heights, The Visibles investigates the secrets of the past, and the hidden corners of our own hearts, to find out whether real happiness is a gift or a choice.

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