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Original Title: One True Thing
ISBN: 0812976185 (ISBN13: 9780812976182)
Edition Language: English
Setting: Langhorne(United States) Montgomery County, Pennsylvania(United States)
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One True Thing Paperback | Pages: 320 pages
Rating: 4.03 | 36685 Users | 1329 Reviews

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Title:One True Thing
Author:Anna Quindlen
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 320 pages
Published:August 8th 2006 by Random House Trade Paperbacks (first published August 30th 1994)
Categories:Fiction. Contemporary. Adult Fiction. Womens Fiction. Chick Lit. Novels. Adult. Family

Relation To Books One True Thing

Ellen Gulden leaves her life as a successful New York journalist, to return home and care for her mother Kate diagnosed with cancer. In the short time they have left, the relationship between mother and daughter - tender, awkward and revealing - deepens, and Ellen is forced to confront painful truths about her adored father. After Kate's death, Ellen goes from devoted daughter to prime suspect, accused of the mercy killing.

Rating Containing Books One True Thing
Ratings: 4.03 From 36685 Users | 1329 Reviews

Piece Containing Books One True Thing
This is the book that changed everything for me ... I used to HATE reading! I was a slow reader and my mind would wander while I read. During one of my last semesters of college, I took an elective course called Death and Dying. Instead of a final exam, we were required to read this book and then write a paper about it. I did not enjoy reading, so I was pleasantly surprised when I couldn't put the book down! This was almost 10 years ago, so I'm not sure if the book was really that remarkable,

Been a while since I wrote a book review. Still reading, but a combination of life and the books I've read simply not prodding me to turn on the computer, have made me rather lax. And then I found this. Must have had this tucked away for years because I certainly don't remember buying it. Suspect it became lost in the ridiculous number of books which by the way Ikea should be sponsoring me to read judging by the ever expanding 'billy' bookshelves we keep buying. But this book. This book is going

Not my favorite book. Probably should have read it in the month of Feb instead of smack in the middle of the summer when you want light happily ever after. I loathed the father, all the choices he made and the fact that the family compromised for him every time. My biggest issue was the fact that it was assumed that the only caregiver possible was the daughter only because she was a girl. Neither of the sons even asked if they could help with the care. She had to move, quit her job and totally

Cancer Sucks!! This book hit way too close to home for me on multiple levels. I lost my grandmother 3 years ago to Cancer, and my family moved into her home to help take care of her, eventually bringing in a nurse until we finally had to move her into hospice. I can't imagine going through this with my own parents and having these feelings and emotions illustrated so perfectly raw really took me to a whole new level of gratefulness. Ellen comes home to take care of her mom (against her will)

Bah. Anna Quindlen's prose makes plucking out eyelashes seem like a reasonably fun way to spend an afternoon.

Ellen Gulden is a 23-year-old up-and-coming magazine writer living in New York City, when her mother is diagnosed with terminal cancer. On a visit home her father tells her that she simply must leave her job and return to help her mother. Kate has always been the quintessential homemaker excelling at cooking, decorating, sewing, stenciling, needlepoint every craft and skill to make her house a loving and welcoming home. Ellen has been more like her father driven and ambitious, given to

This was a bit of a slow start for me, and I felt the epilogue was a bit long and drawn-out, but it really picked up about half-way through, and part of the epilogue was great.The book reminded me a little bit of The End of Your Life Book Club, although that was non-fiction and this is a work of fiction. But a young woman returns to the family home to take care of her mother as she undergoes cancer treatments and, in order to give her an "in" to her daughter's thoughts (they hadn't been very

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