Wish you were here: a novel

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English

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#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • From the author of Small Great Things and The Book of Two Ways comes “a powerfully evocative story of resilience and the triumph of the human spirit” (Taylor Jenkins Reid, author of The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo and Daisy Jones & The Six)Look for Jodi Picoult’s new novel, By Any Other Name, available August 20!Diana O’Toole is perfectly on track. She will be married by thirty, done having kids by thirty-five, and move out to the New York City suburbs, all while climbing the professional ladder in the cutthroat art auction world. She’s an associate specialist at Sotheby’s now, but her boss has hinted at a promotion if she can close a deal with a high-profile client. She’s not engaged just yet, but she knows her boyfriend, Finn, a surgical resident, is about to propose on their romantic getaway to the Galápagos—days before her thirtieth birthday. Right on time.But then a virus that felt worlds away has appeared in the city, and on the eve of their departure, Finn breaks the news: It’s all hands on deck at the hospital. He has to stay behind. You should still go, he assures her, since it would be a shame for all of their nonrefundable trip to go to waste. And so, reluctantly, she goes.Almost immediately, Diana’s dream vacation goes awry. Her luggage is lost, the Wi-Fi is nearly nonexistent, and the hotel they’d booked is shut down due to the pandemic. In fact, the whole island is now under quarantine, and she is stranded until the borders reopen. Completely isolated, she must venture beyond her comfort zone. Slowly, she carves out a connection with a local family when a teenager with a secret opens up to Diana, despite her father’s suspicion of outsiders.In the Galápagos Islands, where Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection was formed, Diana finds herself examining her relationships, her choices, and herself—and wondering if when she goes home, she too will have evolved into someone completely different.

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Contributors
Ireland, Marin Narrator
Picoult, Jodi Author
ISBN
9781984818416
9780593508657
9781432893088
9781984818423

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Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
These books have the appeal factors moving, bittersweet, and reflective, and they have the genres "relationship fiction" and "book club best bets"; and the subjects "friendship" and "best friends."
These books have the appeal factors moving, and they have the genre "relationship fiction"; and the subjects "life change events," "friendship," and "men-women relations."
A pandemic puts relationships to the test in these intricately plotted and moving works of fiction. A woman traveling alone (Wish You Were) and a trio of friends (Doctors) on vacation discover the power of friendship amid chaos and uncertainty. -- Andrienne Cruz
Quarantine changes the way characters look at their lives and their relationships in these intricately-plotted and moving books. Songs takes place in a pandemic apocalypse, while Wish is set at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. -- Mara Zonderman
These books have the appeal factors moving and reflective, and they have the genre "book club best bets"; the subjects "life change events," "self-fulfillment," and "self-discovery"; and characters that are "complex characters."
Relationships are strained by global events in intricately plotted, character-driven novels shaped by real-world issues. In Wish, an engaged couple is separated on different hemispheres during a pandemic. In California, a pregnant woman and her husband face violent social change. -- Alicia Cavitt
Women with exciting plans for the future find themselves on shaky ground when the COVID-19 pandemic hits in these relationship-focused works of fiction. Engaging narratives thoughtfully explore friendships (Wish You) and family dynamics (The Summer). -- Andrienne Cruz
These books have the appeal factors reflective and stylistically complex, and they have the subjects "covid-19 (disease)," "life change events," and "female friendship"; and characters that are "complex characters."
In these engaging works of relationship fiction, women form unexpected friendships and reassess what they want out of life when pandemics indefinitely extend their trips to the Galápagos Islands (Wish You Were Here) and Paris (Resurrection). -- Laura Cohen
These books have the appeal factors moving, reflective, and bittersweet, and they have the theme "bouncing back"; the genres "relationship fiction" and "book club best bets"; the subjects "life change events," "self-fulfillment," and "jilted women"; and characters that are "complex characters."
These books have the genre "relationship fiction"; and the subjects "life change events," "couples," and "men-women relations."
While Wish is realistic fiction and Beginning is science fiction, both intricately plotted, character-driven books center on interpersonal relationships during quarantine and feature likable characters. Wish is about the beginning of a pandemic. Beginning takes place six years after one. -- Alicia Cavitt

Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Jodi Picoult's many fans might also want to give Sue Miller's issue-driven women's fiction a try. She too tackles serious subjects and families in crisis, though her stories have a more literary quality and delve more deeply into character's emotions than do Picoult's. -- Shauna Griffin
Both Jodi Picoult and Anita Shreve write novels that primarily deal with women in contemporary society. They offer sensitive portrayals of characters and explorations of life's intimacies in emotional stories with psychological depths. -- Krista Biggs
In their bittersweet and thought-provoking novels, Diane Chamberlain and Jodi Picoult take controversial issues and examine them through the lives of ordinary people. Their flawed, but sympathetic, characters make choices that have lasting consequences and the fallout is examined from multiple perspectives in these touching stories. -- Halle Carlson
For a quieter, more lyrical tone, consider Ann Hood. Like Picoult, Hood's small town female characters are well developed, but their problems are less controversial and much closer to home--infidelity, sisterly rivalry, or cold feet at an impending marriage. Also, Hood employs a little more introspection and personal drama in her stories. -- Shauna Griffin
While Jodi Picoult's plot catalysts tend to be more dramatic than those in Kristin Hannah's novels, both authors examine how ordinary people react to unexpected challenges. Their characters are sympathetic and realistic, responding to difficult circumstances with grace and fortitude. -- Halle Carlson
Both Jodi Picoult and Jacquelyn Mitchard write about ordinary people in terrible and emotionally complex situations. They both portray these characters sympathetically--no one is perfect, and no one completely in the wrong. -- Shauna Griffin
Both Luanne Rice and Jodi Picoult have strong, intelligent women who are often overwhelmed by tragedy as the main characters of their novels. However, Picoult's multi-layered novels tend to focus more on controversial subjects, while Rice focuses on family and personal relationships. -- Shauna Griffin
Both Anna Quindlen and Jodi Picoult write about tangled family relationships and sympathetic American characters grappling with ethical dilemmas. Picoult's books, however, are more conversational and generally move more quickly than do many of Quindlen's. -- Shauna Griffin
Though Susan Lewis sets her stories in England (while Jodi Picoult sets her novels in the U.S.), both write compelling, emotional tales that -- while on what could be considered sensational subjects -- are understated in execution. -- Shauna Griffin
If you can't imagine any other author writing so compellingly about sympathetic characters faced with agonizing ethical decisions to make, you're in luck. Try Amy Bourrett, who's equally skilled with pacing. -- Shauna Griffin
With a deftly humane touch, novelists Jodi Picoult and Kristina Riggle tell the stories of ordinary people -- frequently women -- facing difficulties that range from alcoholism to end of life decisions. Their well-written characters are both sympathetic and likable, their plots realistic and intriguing. -- Shauna Griffin
Both of these authors write fiction in which ordinary women find their lives in crisis, often (but not always) connected to a controversial issue. Strained or challenged family relationships are key in their novels, which always contain realistic, relatable characters. -- Shauna Griffin

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Picoult, a best-selling novelist always attuned to the zeitgeist, takes on the COVID-19 pandemic in this powerful novel. In March 2020, art specialist Diana O'Toole is on the cusp of selling a major painting for Sotheby's and getting engaged to her caring, handsome surgeon boyfriend, Finn. They have plane tickets to the Galápagos Islands, but when Finn's work at the hospital prevents him from leaving, he urges Diana to take the trip on her own. Diana arrives on Isabela Island just as it and the rest of the world closes down. Stranded, she is taken in by a kindly older woman and befriends a troubled 15-year-old, Beatriz, who is grappling with abandonment issues that Diana can relate to: both women's mothers walked away when they were children. Cut off from Finn save for emails he sends detailing the horrors he's enduring in the hospital as COVID-19 ravages New York, Diana grows ever closer to Beatriz and the teenager's handsome father, Gabriel. She also begins to question whether the goalposts she's set for herself still represent the direction she wants her life to take. Stealthily surprising and very moving, Picoult's latest, written while she was confined at home during the pandemic, taps into the trauma and uncertainty of 2020's global crisis. Absolutely a must-read.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Picoult's novels are always sure-bets for popular fiction readers, but she attains new heights in this keen and vivid pandemic drama.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

Picoult's beguiling page-turner revisits the premise of two alternate worlds, as explored in 2020's The Book of Two Ways, this time with the Covid-19 pandemic as a backdrop. It's March 13, 2020, in New York City, the day after Broadway theaters shut down because of a new contagious virus. Diana O'Toole, an associate specialist with Sotheby's, is on the verge of closing a career-changing deal and expecting her boyfriend, Finn, to propose. But Finn, a surgeon, has just been informed he cannot take their planned Galápagos Islands vacation because the hospital needs all hands on deck for the predicted inundation of virus-infected patients. One couldn't ask for more opposite places: the isolated Pacific Ocean islands with native iguanas, prehistoric turtles, and exotic flora and fauna, and the grim world of packed ICU wards, staff burnout, and the debilitating reality of an onslaught of deaths that cannot be stopped or prevented. In the Galápagos, Diana befriends a teenage girl, begins an affair with the girl's father, and second-guesses her conformist, status-oriented life plans. While a major plot twist feels both contrived and implausible, it serves to examine how catastrophes can strain the characters' relationships while time apart can inspire complex soul-searching. As always, Picoult is eminently readable, though even the author's fans will find some of this wanting. (Nov.)

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Kirkus Book Review

A young woman finds herself at a Covid-induced crossroads in Picoult's latest ultratopical novel. Sotheby's associate Diana O'Toole, age 29, and her surgical resident boyfriend, Finn, are planning a trip to the Galapagos in March 2020. But as New York City shuts down, Finn is called to do battle against Covid-19 in his hospital's ICU and ER, while Diana, at his urging, travels to the archipelago alone. She arrives on Isabela Island just as quarantine descends and elects to stay, though her luggage was lost, her hotel is shuttered, and her Spanish is "limited." What follows is the meticulously researched depiction Picoult readers have come to expect, of the flora and fauna of this island and both its paradisiacal and dangerous aspects. Beautiful lagoons hide riptides, spectacular volcanic vistas conceal deep pits--and penguins bite! A hotel employee known only as Abuela gives Diana shelter at her home. Luckily, Abuela's grandson Gabriel, a former tour guide, speaks flawless English, as does his troubled daughter, Beatriz, 14, who was attending school off-island when the pandemic forced her back home. Beatriz and Diana bond over their distant and withholding mothers: Diana's is a world-famous photographer now consigned to a memory care facility with early-onset Alzheimer's, while Beatriz's ran off with a somewhat less famous photographer. Despite patchy cellphone signals and Wi-Fi, emails from Finn break through, describing, also in Picoult's spare-no-detail starkness, the horrors of his long shifts as the virus wreaks its variegated havoc and the cases and death toll mount. Diana is venturing into romantically and literally treacherous waters when Picoult yanks this novel off life-support by resorting to a flagrantly hackneyed plot device. Somehow, though, it works, thanks again to that penchant for grounding every fictional scenario in thoroughly documented fact. Throughout, we are treated to pithy if rather self-evident thematic underscoring, e.g. "You can't plan your life….Because then you have a plan. Not a life." Warning: Between lurid scenes of plague and paradise, whiplash may ensue. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

*Starred Review* Picoult, a best-selling novelist always attuned to the zeitgeist, takes on the COVID-19 pandemic in this powerful novel. In March 2020, art specialist Diana O'Toole is on the cusp of selling a major painting for Sotheby's and getting engaged to her caring, handsome surgeon boyfriend, Finn. They have plane tickets to the Galápagos Islands, but when Finn's work at the hospital prevents him from leaving, he urges Diana to take the trip on her own. Diana arrives on Isabela Island just as it and the rest of the world closes down. Stranded, she is taken in by a kindly older woman and befriends a troubled 15-year-old, Beatriz, who is grappling with abandonment issues that Diana can relate to: both women's mothers walked away when they were children. Cut off from Finn save for emails he sends detailing the horrors he's enduring in the hospital as COVID-19 ravages New York, Diana grows ever closer to Beatriz and the teenager's handsome father, Gabriel. She also begins to question whether the goalposts she's set for herself still represent the direction she wants her life to take. Stealthily surprising and very moving, Picoult's latest, written while she was confined at home during the pandemic, taps into the trauma and uncertainty of 2020's global crisis. Absolutely a must-read.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Picoult's novels are always sure-bets for popular fiction readers, but she attains new heights in this keen and vivid pandemic drama. Copyright 2021 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2021 Booklist Reviews.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Picoult's beguiling page-turner revisits the premise of two alternate worlds, as explored in 2020's The Book of Two Ways, this time with the Covid-19 pandemic as a backdrop. It's March 13, 2020, in New York City, the day after Broadway theaters shut down because of a new contagious virus. Diana O'Toole, an associate specialist with Sotheby's, is on the verge of closing a career-changing deal and expecting her boyfriend, Finn, to propose. But Finn, a surgeon, has just been informed he cannot take their planned Galápagos Islands vacation because the hospital needs all hands on deck for the predicted inundation of virus-infected patients. One couldn't ask for more opposite places: the isolated Pacific Ocean islands with native iguanas, prehistoric turtles, and exotic flora and fauna, and the grim world of packed ICU wards, staff burnout, and the debilitating reality of an onslaught of deaths that cannot be stopped or prevented. In the Galápagos, Diana befriends a teenage girl, begins an affair with the girl's father, and second-guesses her conformist, status-oriented life plans. While a major plot twist feels both contrived and implausible, it serves to examine how catastrophes can strain the characters' relationships while time apart can inspire complex soul-searching. As always, Picoult is eminently readable, though even the author's fans will find some of this wanting. (Nov.)

Copyright 2021 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2021 Publishers Weekly.
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