

Sean: I'm a tough-guy cop, so I didn't cry when you were born. My bits are going to show you that OI also creates difficult issues for siblings.

My Mom had been a single-parent before she met Sean and had you. Otherwise I wouldn't have a story.Īmelia: I'm your older half-sister. I was so happy, though, when she told me you had Type III and you wouldn't die at birth but would have a short painful life and then die. I felt as broken as you when Piper, the gynaecologist, saw the 28-week scan and told me you had osteogenesis imperfecta (OI), a rare condition where your bones snap easily and you never grow taller than three foot. Though it's the readers who would be Weeping by the end. Provocative and complex, Handle with Care explores what it means to do something in the name of love-and what those choices say about us.Īmy Scribner lives with her family in Olympia, Washington.Charlotte: I called you Willow. Charlotte is sometimes strong but often all-too-human, second-guessing and justifying her own choices. The book doesn’t spoon-feed all the right answers or lionize the characters.

Told alternatively from the points of view of Sean, Charlotte, Piper, Amelia and Charlotte’s attorney, Marin-all of whom speak directly to Willow in their narration-Handle with Care is everything faithful readers would expect from Picoult, handled in her thoughtful, elegiac prose. The only catch: Charlotte must sue her best friend and obstetrician, Piper Reece, on the grounds that if Piper had diagnosed their baby’s condition earlier in the pregnancy, they could have chosen abortion. Charlotte thinks she’s found the answer when a lawyer tells her that suing for medical malpractice could free them from their money problems. The O’Keefes wouldn’t trade their funny, smart daughter for anything, but they’re consumed with worry and mounting debt. Even before birth, the fetus suffers numerous fractures, and doctors warn the O’Keefes that their baby will have a difficult, painful life.Īnd she does: Willow breaks bones in her sleep, while playing, even if her mother hits the brakes too hard while Willow is strapped into her car seat.

Charlotte is thrilled to get pregnant, but the fetus is diagnosed in utero with brittle bone syndrome. When Sean and Charlotte O’Keefe marry, he adopts her little girl, Amelia, and they immediately begin trying to conceive a second child. In lesser hands, such an undertaking would be unwieldy at best, but Picoult delivers a deeply affecting story about one family struggling to do the right thing. But in Handle With Care, she out-Picoults herself by tackling all of the above-mentioned topics, and then some. Jodi Picoult has never been one to shy away from hot-button issues.
