The Deep End of the Ocean

by Jacquelyn Mitchard

Hardcover, 1996

Status

Available

Call number

F MIT

Call number

F MIT

Barcode

3462

Publication

Viking (1996), Edition: First Edition, 434 pages

Description

"Watch your brother," Beth Cappadora tells Vincent, 7. Five minutes later she returns, "Where is Ben?" It is the moment every parent fears and it arrives to a mother of three in Chicago. The novel follows the family as year after year the hope of finding Ben recedes. Nine years later a boy knocks on their door looking for lawn work. It can't be. It is.

Original publication date

1996-06 (1e édition originale américaine, Viking Penguin, New York)
1998-02-11 (1e traduction et édition française, Calmann-Lévy)
1999-04-14 (Réédition française, Presse pocket)
2023-03-09 (Réédition française, Archipoche)

User reviews

LibraryThing member TinyDancer11
Heartbreaking storyline, I'm just not sure it was executed as well as it could've been. It seemed to drag on in several places, and I wanted to kick Beth in the face the majority of the time.
LibraryThing member karen_o
One of the most heartbreaking novels I've ever read. I could barely even finish it -- in fact I skimmed major portions of this book -- because the family's agony was just too much for me. Of course, at the time I still had young children so my sympathy level would have been very high; I might have
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a better time dealing with a re-reading of it today.
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LibraryThing member readaholic12
I wish I had dreamed this book. I read it in a day; it stayed with me for years. The story is sad and frustrating, the characters are intriguing. What would you do, who would you become, if you lost one of your children? What would become of what remains of your family? A very thought provoking
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read.
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LibraryThing member dawng
I found this novel to be somewhat disappointing. I just didn't care for the main character.
LibraryThing member kathysoper
A family is torn apart after 3-year-old Ben disappears. I almost put the book down, because the first half was so painful to read. I'm glad I didn't.
LibraryThing member Irenes
This book will rip your heart out, but stick with it... you'll be glad you did.
LibraryThing member MarianV
This novel could best be described as a page turner. That is what you want to do -- turn the page quickly to see what happens next. The subject is every mother's nightmare -- a child disappears. But beyond the plot elements there are people. The characters are drawn so that you care what happens to
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them. Which makes the plot even more intense. This book is a best-seller for a good reason.
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LibraryThing member roxyfoxy5311
Very well written. Novel as made into a movie with Michelle Pheiffer. Goes through the trials and turbulations of a child abduction.
LibraryThing member maiadeb
Haunting story written well...read many years ago and still crystal clear. The unspeakable fear of every parent...
LibraryThing member russelllindsey
It is a decent story, but not one that I could really relate to in any real sense. A good beach novel, but nothing spectacular.
LibraryThing member RPerritt
I cannot imagine going through what this family went through. I really don't know who to feel more sorry for the mom, dad, the other kids, or the other relatives. My heart also goes out to the woman who kidnapped Ben. I enjoyed this book and I would read more by this author.
LibraryThing member boucherie21
A very troublesome story of a family. The middle child, three year old Ben, was kidnapped, and it changed the dynamics of the family completely. I was very angry with the mom for ignoring her other children as she mourned and blamed herself for his loss..... Got better in the second half.
LibraryThing member Cecilturtle
A rather compelling tale about a child abduction - appealing on an emotional level, but not on a literary one
LibraryThing member WittyreaderLI
I tried to get into this book. Having just finished "How to be Lost," I think I made a mistake reading this book back to back with another similar book. I became bored around page 125. The book dragged on and on, with characters that seems just "so-so." So, I am reviewing a book I haven't full
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finished, but I write this as a cautionary tale. This one will require a lot of attention. After reading what I've read, it really makes me long for a book that I don't feel a chore to read. I have another Jacquelyn Mitchard book, which I'm hoping to like better.
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LibraryThing member Nancy.Mosholder
Fast paced story but not sure I liked it.
LibraryThing member jcelrod
As if the abduction of her child wasn't traumatic enough, the rediscovery of him as a teenager brings its own set of traumas for a mother.
LibraryThing member LonnieB
Very disappointing. Pablum and not worth reading.
LibraryThing member WildMaggie
SPOILER ALERT—this review discusses the plot beyond what some people who haven’t read the book may want to know.

There are lots of reviews of this book out here on the web so perhaps it doesn’t really need one more. But reading several made me want to tap those reviewers of the shoulders and
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point out they were looking at the author’s right hand when the really interesting part of this books was in her left. Reviewers focus on the familiar Act One of the story—the missing child, the mother paralyzed with grief neglecting the rest of her family, the brave father trying to hold everything together and keep life going for his other kids, the large cast of supporting characters. These elements are all very well rendered—sometimes heartbreakingly so (think The Lovely Bones).

And when, years later, the missing child accidently turns up on his family’s doorstep, not aware that he was ever missing, I wondered how the writer could need another couple hundred pages to wrap this thing up. It’s at that point that many of the online reviewers lost interest; many state that they skimmed or had to force themselves to read the rest of the book. But Deep End of the Ocean is not the formula family-crisis tragedy these reviewers seem to crave.

The author performs such graceful slight-of-hand that everybody focuses on the separation while the real heart and soul of this book is the reunion. Sure, to have a reunion, first you have to have a separation. But, the loss in Deep End of the Ocean—as crushingly sad as it is—is preamble. The hard questions at the heart of the book are about reunion. Can reunion be more than superficial and what are the costs?
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LibraryThing member mikedraper
A young mother asks her seven-year-old son to watch his three-year-old brother while she registers for a school reunion.

When the registration takes a long time and she returns, her three-year-old son Ben has been kidnapped.

A good story of interpersonal live and the results on a family when a
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tragedy like this happens.

Years later, a young boy comes to the woman's door to see if she'd like her grass mowed and the mother, Beth, swears it is Ben.
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LibraryThing member Marlene-NL
I know I loved this book cause it is on my amazon list: Ten great Books I've read in 2004. Would like to read again.
LibraryThing member Maggie.Evans
This book had a really interesting premise, but it wasn't executed well at all. The writing was mediocre, the pacing slow, and the protagonist rather unsympathetic.
LibraryThing member elsyd
This is the story of a dysfunctional family that goes through the trauma of having one child kidnapped. While it was the story of the kidnapping and aftermath I thought it was more the story of Vincent, who had emotional problems before this took place. Vincent gets some professional help, but
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Beth, the mother does not. By the end of the book neither Beth nor Vincent are normal. This was a great story, but really dragged in a lot of places.
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LibraryThing member AliceAnna
Life's too short to read depressing books about a main character with no redeeming qualities whatsoever. I got through 7 chapters and decided that, for the first time in years, I'm not going to finish this book and it will immediately go in my Goodwill pile. Again, life is too short.
LibraryThing member christinejoseph
couldn't put it down — lost boy — her soul — 8 years later

Both highly suspenseful and deeply moving, The Deep End of the Ocean imagines every mother's worst nightmare—the disappearance of a child—as it explores a family's struggle to endure, even against extraordinary odds. Filled with
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compassion, humor, and brilliant observations about the texture of real life, here is a story of rare power, one that will touch readers' hearts and make them celebrate the emotions that make us all one.
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LibraryThing member PamV
I remember reading this when it first came out in the late 90's and I remember loving it! When I re-read it, I did not remember one single thing from my previous read. And, I don't remember why I loved it so much. I have never experienced the loss that this family did, but I found each one of the
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characters more frustrating than the last; and I was unable to relate with any of them. I think that JM tried to get us to identify with Beth and appreciate her honesty in her feelings, but it just didn't happen for me.
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Rating

(931 ratings; 3.5)

Pages

434
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