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Someone Else's Child: A Novel
 
 
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Someone Else's Child: A Novel [Hardcover]

Nancy Woodruff (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)


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Book Description

July 5, 2000
From debut novelist Nancy Woodruff comes this chilling and beautifully wrought story of forgiveness, renewal, and the ever-elusive second chance.

When fifteen-year-old Matt and his family move from Oregon to an affluent Connecticut suburb, the fact that he is home-schooled brands him as more than an outsider -- he is a town oddity. Just when he seems to have made inroads into the closed social circuit, just when he is embraced by a trio of teenage girls and feels his life might be changing for the better, he is responsible for a devastating car crash that leaves two of the girls dead.

Tara isn't in the car with her best friends. Instead, she's by her mother Jennie's bedside as she gives birth to a baby girl. While Jennie and her husband Chris mourn Tara's friends, and try to make sense of their eldest daughter's loss and their own new baby, a pervasive sense of blame begins to rain down on Matt. Jennie knows the community's reaction will surely ruin Matt's life. But when she reaches out to him, hiring him to work for her high school reunion company for the summer, Jennie suddenly finds herself vilified as well. In the face of community and family derision, both imagined and real, physical and emotional, Jennie and Matt soon find themselves in solidarity.As their attachment grows, Jennie realizes that she is bound to Matt by more than just compassion -- that the broken child she sought to save is, somehow, reviving her.

"Someone Else's Child" is a deeply moving story of guilt and forgiveness, despair and hope, and the intricacies of love and responsibility. In rich and unforgettable prose, Nancy Woodruff masterfully explores the fraying loyalties that can turn our worldupside down in the face of tragedy.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Woodruff's earnestly felt but timidly executed family drama concerns the consequences of a tragic car crash involving teenagers in a wealthy Connecticut suburb. Matt Fallon, a 15-year-old home-schooled boy whose family has recently moved to the wealthy town of Sheldrake from Oregon, is driving two girls home from a party one night when the car goes out of control. Matt is unharmed, but the girls are killed. The girls' best friend, Tara Breeze, whose incipient crush on Matt began at the swimming pool they all frequented, would also have been in the car if her mother, 34-year-old Jennie, had not been at the hospital giving birth to a new baby daughter. In alternating chapters told from Matt's and Jennie's points of view, Woodruff recounts the shock, grieving and gradual attempts at healing of all the families concerned. A new mother again after so many years, Jennie has to contend with physical weariness and the mood swings of her teenage daughter while also trying to run her business organizing high school reunions. Compassion for Matt, charged with reckless homicide and ostracized by the community, leads Jennie to offer him a summer job working for her; however, their growing love for each other, although the kernel of the novel, remains unnamed until the last pages. Woodruff's bland writing style keeps the novel from rising far above standard "women's fiction," but there is a satisfying integrity in her portrayal of settled, ordinary people visited by disaster and called upon to make far-reaching decisions. (July)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

This is an excellent first novel, but its emotional topic"the death of two teens"may affect its appeal. Jennie Breeze is 34, married to her high school sweetheart and the mother of 16-year-old Tara and newborn Alison. The night of the birth, Tara!s two best girlfriends are killed in a one-car accident; on a normal Friday, Tara would have been with them. The driver, Matt Fallon, an all-around good kid new to this wealthy Connecticut suburb, is ostracized by all but his loving family. Wanting to reach out to him, Jennie hires him for summer work at her home-based high school reunion business. Her act of kindness becomes a lifeline for Matt, and he, in turn, provides the support and friendship she needs with a busy husband, new baby, and a grieving teenage daughter. Woodruff!s fine novel explores the complexities of friendship and parenting while authentically conveying the importance of giving and receiving love. It also powerfully portrays the courage required to embrace life after a mistake. For most fiction collections."Rebecca Sturm Kelm, Northern Kentucky Univ. Lib., Highland Heights
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster; 1st Printing edition (July 5, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0684865076
  • ISBN-13: 978-0684865072
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,625,927 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Engrossing, moving, profound, February 5, 2001
This review is from: Someone Else's Child: A Novel (Hardcover)
I was swept away by this book; it puts you into the lives of the characters in a deep and profound way. I did not at all view it as a "light summer read", but rather as a purveyor of some deep and interesting truths.

So often our society villifies young people who've made a dreadful and tragic mistake, as Matt did. In this novel we can see from his point of view how ready he is to agree with the town, and how little he deserves that villification, and also how Jen is able to give him some small relief from that hatred and start him on a path of healing. At the end, however, the reader finds one, of several, reasons why the title is "Someone Else's Child". Jen's ultimate loyalty has to be to her own. And although, in using Jen and Matt as the two voices of the novel, the author keeps us a step removed from the horrific pain the parents of the dead girls feel, it is still acknowledged and woven thoroughly into the story.

As an inveterate reader, I highly recommend this book!

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Once Is Not Enough, July 3, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Someone Else's Child: A Novel (Hardcover)
Someone Else's Child explores the feelings of those affected by the tragedy of teenage death in a mature and knowlegable way that had me saying, "I've felt like that." I wanted to know about the continuing lives of the main characters long after I turned the last page. There could be another whole book by this author relating the continuing "fall-out" from the accident, and I would read it!
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Engrossing, sticky summer story, June 26, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Someone Else's Child: A Novel (Hardcover)
Someone Else's Child is the kind of book you live in for a little while. After reading the first few chapters, I attempted to go back to my reality but found it nearly impossible. I was stuck in Connecticut, in early summer, trying to sort through the pieces of my life. The narrative flows smoothly between the two main characters, Matt and Jennie, and I found myself frustrated at being allowed only a passive presence in this story. I wanted to act out, I wanted to change the course of events, I was angered and embittered...I was completely hooked.

The story has so many tangents that at times I was annoyed, almost skimming paragraphs to find what I was most interested in. However, Woodruff ties it neatly together midway through the book, and lets you figure some things out for yourself before confirming them in the final chapters.

Nancy Woodruff has written a piece of contemporary literature with an Oprah's Book Club accessibility. I did not falter in my reading of this book, but I did go back to read paragraphs that sang with prose. I read a lot, about a book a week, and rarely am I so engrossed that I miss my favorite TV shows. (Sad but true.) Many a night found me curled up on the couch, nearly eating this book until I was finished. It is a quick and delicious read, and a book I know I will go back to when I am temporarily bored of my existence. Highly recommended.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
SHE HAD HER LUNCH early that Friday, just after 11:30, the thick stack of envelopes she'd picked up from her post office box on the table next to her. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Matt Fallon, Pastor Linney, Joel Tarn, Jennie Breeze, Marilyn Linders, Rachel Cleary, Camille Cleary, Alison Grace, Connaught Road, Mike Herndon, Sheldrake High, Speak Memory, Virginia Woolf, Abominable Snowvan, Jennie Northrop, Jim Storvak, Missy Foley
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