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My Sister's Keeper, By Jodi Picoult

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Jodi Picoult is an author from New Hampshire who takes her passions and turns them into best-selling novels. Picoult as three children who inspire and influence all of her writing. My Sister's Keeper, Between the Lines, and Off The Page all convey a strong mother child bond. As Jodi Picoult writes, it is evident that her relationship with her children impacted her writing. The bond between mother and child is strongly represented in her writing. In Picoult’s novels mother child relationships are emphasized, due to the impact her children had on her. When Jodi Picoult writes a novel they are often inspire or based upon one of her children. Jodi Picoult has three children, Samantha, Jake, and Kyle, all have influenced her writing. All three …show more content…

‘You are not suggesting my child be taken away from me.’ Taken away? Where would I go?” (Picoult 89) Just at the thought of being separated the mother and daughter freak out. Sara can not think about losing another child from her house and Anna can’t think of living anywhere else. The way Picoult writes the characters reactions to the thought of separate, shows that she knows how it would feel to be separated from one of her children. Unfortunately due to the circumstances in the novel Anna and Sara are separated for a brief time period, but their relationship is strained not broken. This mother daughter pair’s relationship is unbreakable and can withstand through the toughest times.
In Between the Lines Picoult wrote about is Delilah and her mother, who have an untouchable bond. Since Delilah’s father left when she was a baby, it has been the two of them for many years. Delilah’s mom feels completely comfortable with Delilah and has not reason not to trust her, but when Delilah stops talking to her she feels left out. She does not freak out or go helicopter parent on Delilah, but she does want to know what is going on, “I blush, ‘Nothing, Mom, Seriously!’ ‘Delilah,’ my mother says, her face setting grimly. ‘Are you doing drugs?’ ‘What? I yelp. ‘No!’ She rips aside the covers and sees the fairy tale.” (Picoult 146). Picoult establishes a mother daughter relationship that strong and relatable. Through her relationships with her own children, she …show more content…

Instead Jessamine Jacobs and her son Edgar’s relationship develops. In the first book they never fully got along. It was the typical teenage rebellion and playing video games too much that distanced them, but in this book Picoult develops their love and bond. Jessamine in an author, who wrote a fairy tale where the characters live in the world of the story. When Jessamine is diagnosed with cancer she hides it from her son. She is faced with a few months to live, but what she doesn’t know is no one ever dies of gets sick in the fairy tale world. Edgar is willing to leave this world to save his mother, “My mother is going to die if she stays her. But what if she didn’t have too” (Picoult 297) Edgar’s idea of them becoming apart of the story is what saves his mother’s life. He chose to give up his friends, school and girl friend,for his mother. Picoult knows the sacrifices that are made for a strong relationship, because of her own children. She clearly identifies that a mother child relationship is more important that everything else. Jessamine and Edgar actions show they have an unconditional love for each other. The mother child relationship is emphasized due to Picoult's own experiences with her

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