Detail

Title: The Book of Two Ways ISBN: 9781984818355
· Hardcover 416 pages
Genre: Fiction, Romance, Contemporary, Audiobook, Historical, Historical Fiction, Adult, Adult Fiction, Northern Africa, Egypt, Book Club, Family

The Book of Two Ways

Published September 22nd 2020 by Ballantine, Hardcover 416 pages

Everything changes in a single moment for Dawn Edelstein. She's on a plane when the flight attendant makes an announcement: prepare for a crash landing. She braces herself as thoughts flash through her mind. The shocking thing is, the thoughts are not of her husband, but a man she last saw fifteen years ago: Wyatt Armstrong.

Dawn, miraculously, survives the crash, but so do all the doubts that have suddenly been raised. She has led a good life. Back in Boston, there is her husband, Brian, her beloved daughter, and her work as a death doula, where she helps ease the transition between life and death for patients in hospice.

But somewhere in Egypt is Wyatt Armstrong, who works as an archaeologist unearthing ancient burial sites, a job she once studied for, but was forced to abandon when life suddenly intervened. And now, when it seems that fate is offering her second chances, she is not as sure of the choice she once made.

After the crash landing, the airline ensures the survivors are seen by a doctor, then offers transportation wherever they want to go. The obvious option for Dawn is to continue down the path she is on and go home to her family. The other is to return to the archaeological site she left years before, reconnect with Wyatt and their unresolved history, and maybe even complete her research on The Book of Two Ways--the first known map of the afterlife.

As the story unfolds, Dawn's two possible futures unspool side by side, as do the secrets and doubts long buried beside them. Dawn must confront the questions she's never truly asked: What does a life well-lived look like? When we leave this earth, what do we leave behind? Do we make choices...or do our choices make us? And who would you be, if you hadn't turned out to be the person you are right now?

User Reviews

Nilufer Ozmekik

Rating: really liked it
Hmmm… you see the alarming bell which warns you there is an unpopular review is about to come and of course I never expected it’s happening because I just finished a compelling novel of one of my all-time favorite authors. And as soon as I read the blurb about second chances, the Sliding Door/what ifs theme and amazing journey to learn more about Ancient Egyptian culture, I started to whistle Bangles’ song and getting so excited about this promising adventure. I already found amazing two reading buddies to share my excitement:



But as soon as I started flipping pages after the mind blowing start reminded of us Lost series’ beginning, Dawn Edelstein’ thankfully survives from the plane crash, my excitement hit to the roof! I wanted to see what was gonna happen next: After the imminent shock and her entire life flashed before her eyes, Dawn realizes there are things holding her back to have fulfilled life. And there are two paths appear in front of her: she may go back to her family life: husband she’s been married for 15 years and her 14 years old teenage girl. And of course her work at hospice as death doula is waiting for her. (Interesting choice of profession) Or she goes to Egypt and finishes her project she’s started 15 years ago when she has been working as an archaeologist but that means she has to meet with her first love of her life: Wyatt.

So we read her two paths and we also learn more about Dawn’s story starting 15 years ago in Egypt by flashbacks. And interestingly two paths successfully intertwine. I have no problem about the promising premise of the book about taking your chances, learning from your mistakes and leaving no place for your regrets.

BUT… Yes the problematic thing about this book: there is so much information bombardment exhaust your brain cells. Quantum psychics, philosophical approach to life and death, reincarnation, superstition , Egyptology, marriage, fat-shaming etc.

It seem like the author juggled way too much plot balls at the same time and all of them start to fall down from her hands one by one. Especially I truly got lost at the Egyptology parts with all those hieroglyphs, symbolism, secret language hidden at the tombs, digital mapping, nope I’m stopping there. After reading those parts and scientific explanations Brian’s husband gave her about quantum psychics (couldn’t she marry with a man who has regular job?) I thought my mind was so close to explode.

There are so many materials in this book were hard to absorb and all those details made you feel like this a study book you have to read by drawing its lines to pass your exam instead a regular, gripping contemporary fiction. The author may write at least 4 different books with those materials. But instead of that she chose to insert them into one story and I truly got so exhausted and needed more grey cells transplant because I truly fried most of them by over usage.
I loved the family parts, impossible and meanest love-triangle of the story ( it’s so mean because any choice Dawn makes may end with unhappiness!) mother-daughter relationship and of course her profession as “death doula” at hospice was one of the most heartfelt, eerie but also interesting part that attracted my full attention.

But I think those Egypt parts, symbolism, quantum psychics just killed the essence of this meaningful story. When you add too much scientific information into the equation, it affects the intensity of meaningful messages and emotional warmth of the story. But this is my opinion. There is nothing missing about this story. In fact there are too many things to absorb, understand, discover, feel, learn, and search so eventually they overwhelmed me.

Overall: I loved the characters. I loved the idea of second chances, choosing different paths. I loved the devoted love between mother and daughter. But those scientific parts of the book failed me. I love Jodi Picoult’s brave writing style and play with our emotions to shake us to the core. But this time I decided to give only three stars. That’s a first for me, too. It doesn’t mean I didn’t enjoy the book. The emotional parts of the story completely worked with my needs but the informational parts were exhausting and confusing. They were still impeccably written but in my opinion, they didn’t fit so well with the main plot.

Special thanks to NetGalley and Random House Publishing/Ballentine Books for sharing this ARC with me in exchange my honest opinions and review.


Elyse Walters

Rating: really liked it
This novel should come with a warning:
It’s TEXTBOOK TOP HEAVY.....
“Mummies and Deadies” interweave with complexities of life - love - birth -
death coaching -
character backstories -
superstitions -
philosophical narration - sarcastic, competitive and flirtatious dialogue - marriage -lovers - parenting - betrayals - secrets & lies...and other messy relationship complications.

“There is a literary text in Ancient Egyptian that says the gods made magic so that people could ward off misfortune. And yet, although you might be able to diminish something bad, you still couldn’t prevent it from happening”.

The heavy archaeology and Egyptology details hinder a natural elegiac rhythmic reading flow.
The author did extensive impressive research —
but the reader will also need to research the authors research, to gain a better knowledge and understanding of it all....
Unless.....
like one reviewer said, she skipped over the Egyptology details. But then what’s the point?

Sometimes it took me 40 minutes to finish ONE KINDLE PAGE....
Because....
I had to look up names, details, history, science, artists, scholars, and other historical information.
I wish I had been warned ahead of time of the HIGH PROBABILITY that I would need to STUDY Jodi Picoult’s research myself.
It took me two weeks to finish this book....( long for me).
It was often maddening, draining, ( sometimes interesting)... but a heck of a lot of personal work for me to read up on:
...hieroglyphs,
...photogrammetry,
...geomatics,
...digital mapping in 3-D
compared to linear measuring,
...hieroglyphics & software technology,
...epigraphy, ( ancient Greek study of inscriptions),
...Djehutynakht ( an ancient Egyptian) who was known for his painted outer coffin ( commonly called Bersha coffin)....
...archaeological Coffin Texts....[The Book of Two Ways]
... performance artist: Marina Abramovic
...oppositional defiant disorder...
...sloughing off skin and brain cells
...holding therapy
...fat basenji
...paleography...
...renaissance masters and French painters ( Manet)...
...Jean/Francois Champollion ( French scholar, philologist, and orientalist),
...the tombs of necropolis and the tomb Djehutynakht
AND....
... quantum mechanics:
“We’re all made up of molecules, like those electrons, if you zoom in and zoom in and zoom in, everything we do is explained by quantum mechanics”.

I questioned if readers would enjoy the heavy loaded details.
I questioned if whether or not I could recommend this book to my friends?
Yes, .... but ‘only’ with ‘advance warning’ and preparedness to ‘study’ the parts not familiar with - rather than skip over the history —
Or again I ask: “then why bother?”

“The last datable hieroglyphic inscription was written by a Nubian priest visiting Philae in 394 B.C.E., because even when the Byzantine emperor closed all the temples, he still let the Nubians come workshop Isis. Then the entire language was forgotten for fifteen hundred years— until the Rosetta Stone was founded in 1799. Written in demotic, hieroglyphs, and Greek, it’s an incredibly boring tax about tax benefits and temple priests— but because it bore the same message in three languages, it provided the code needed to crack the meaning of Ancient Egyptian writing. In 1822, Jean-Francois Champollion published the first translation of hieroglyphs”.


So, for me, this book became ‘textbook’ 101-learning.... Four thousand years of history.....
mixed with trying to get to know the protagonist -Dawn Edelstein-better. She was not an easy person to feel close to.
Dawn questioned the life she was living with her husband Brian. It was clear that she loved her daughter Meret — and valued her job as a ‘death doula’ and her clients,( especially Win)....
But....
Dawn never stopped loving Wyatt Armstrong....( her Yale grad school heartthrob colleague, and competitor).

Wyatt often called Dawn, ‘Olive’. To Wyatt’s credit ( and Jodi Picoult’s playfulness with intimacy), Wyatt’s flirtatious love expression toward Dawn was mockingly cute!

“In spite of all that has happened in the past six weeks— from the days spent trying to repair the sieve of my marriage, to Win’s letter and the trip I made to London; from my last-minute decision to go to Egypt, to reuniting with Wyatt and the unearthing coffin— getting to this point feels both monumental and inevitable”.

“There is nothing –– nothing—like being the one to discover a piece of the world that has gone missing”.

My final conclusion.... there is some enjoyment, mystery suspense... some interesting history...
But do not go into this book blindly.
Be aware of the facts that it’s heavy loaded with facts!!!

As for the ‘male/female/male’ theme in this book...
(Dawn/Brian/Wyatt), > .... its a little Lifetime-movie-ish.
Not necessarily a negative - but....it’s wise to be aware of it being what it is.

Personally, I was hooked enough to invest my time in this book— but I was also frustrated with all the time it took.
Simultaneously, a double edge sword reading experience was a mixture of positives and negatives.

Thank you Netgalley, Random house publishing/Ballantine, and Jodi Picoult


Melissa

Rating: really liked it
Because if there is a garden of maybes, you are the invasive plant I can’t ever get rid of.


If there’s one thing I appreciate, it’s a storyline with the power to make me think, to ponder the intricacies of life. The Book of Two Ways provides a contemplative look at the multitude of possible paths set before us, the regret that can linger in the shadows of our choices, and the reality that each one of us will one day reach the end of the road. In signature Jodi Picoult fashion, it’s evident a lot of foresight and research went into the creation of this novel.

If the early reviews are any indication, this is set to be another polarizing novel, but not for reasons longtime fans might initially assume. Picoult’s previous storylines have confronted a myriad of controversial topics—like abortion, racism, and the death penalty, to name a few—but not so much this time. Instead, she folds readers into a story riddled with Egyptology, quantum mechanics (this made me reminisce about Dark Matter), and the emotional aspects of life as a death doula. Admittedly, Picoult is a little heavy-handed in her delivery of the Egyptology aspect of the storyline, the majority of which I happened to find quite interesting. I was able to appreciate the parallels Picoult was drawing between past and present, life and death. The amalgam of alternates that skew our paths: temptation, desire, the need for security, or love. For a vast number of readers, that might not be the case. Hence, my polarizing theory.

Readers meet Dawn at a time when she’s balancing the stressors of her career as a death doula, raising a teenage daughter with body image issues, and maintaining a connection with her husband of 15-years, Brian. A mostly happy, yet complacent, existence.

What you wouldn’t know on the outset is that Dawn once had dreams of pursuing a career in Egyptology. That she spent semesters of her collegiate life immersed in the tombs, recovering mummified remains, and deciphering hieroglyphics. In that period of her life, Wyatt dominated her heart, challenged her mentally, and incited a passion she’s failed to experience since. But unforeseen circumstances and her resulting decisions made him the one that got away.

Dawn’s story flips between time and place, from past to present, until she forces the two to collide. Her desire to revisit what might have been overriding all else.

There are a plethora of emotions to contend with here. Part of me wanted to condemn Dawn for her audacity and selfishness. Yet, I found myself awestruck by her tenacity to see things through—to put her lingering feelings and the what-ifs to the test. But, this is also right where my contention sneaks in with my inability to accept one character’s reactions. I foresaw more hurt and anger, something fiercely heartfelt. Not mellow understanding. But, in hindsight, I think it circles back to the multitude of choices and alternate realities floating around the universe for every situation.

The Book Of Two Ways provides a solid reminder that life is fleeting and tomorrow is never guaranteed. What thoughts, missed opportunities, or lost loves will linger in the forefront of your mind as you approach the end? Are you gutsy enough to make life-altering changes now, to satiate your heart’s desires?

*Thank you to Ballantine Books for sharing an advanced copy in exchange for my honest thoughts.


Kendall

Rating: really liked it
WOW.. this was painful to finish.

Oh my gosh..... I felt like I was reading a history book gone wrong. Ugh... I thought I was going to be reading another fabulous women's fiction novel but my goodness was bogged down with an Egyptian style textbook.

YIKES.... wayyyy to many details about history. Yes, I can see how history was needed in some of this story but not the ENTIRE book.

The heavy terms of archeology and Egyptian really make it hard to read this. It took me EXTRA long to read the majority of this book due to the heavy content of the story. I felt like I should have been looking up names, details, and definitions.

I skimmed the majority of this book sadly and would not recommend to Picoult fans. This is nothing like her previous older novels that I fell in love with.

2 stars

Thank you to Netgalley and Random House Ballantine for the arc in exchange for an honest review.

Pub date: 9/22/20
Published to GR: 5/25/20


Paromjit

Rating: really liked it
Jodi Picoult's latest novel is a fascinating exploration of life, love, Egyptology and Egyptian history, and Physics, regrets and wondering how life might have turned out if different life choices had been made. It has some commonalities with a book I recently read, Matt Haig's The Midnight Library, such as what makes life worth living, what really matters, and the need to focus on living, as life is short. Fortunately, reading this book was made easier as I already had an interest and some familiarity with Egyptology and the aspects of Physics which Picoult goes into some detail in the book with her indepth research, without this, I can imagine many readers finding this a much more frustrating experience.

It begins with Dawn Edelstein, living in Boston, married to Brian with a beloved daughter, Meret, on a plane that is plummeting, and her thoughts are not on the life she has, but drifting back to her past as an Egyptologist, and Wyatt Armstrong, a life that was torn asunder when a dying mother and family responsibilities claimed her instead. Fortunately, Dawn survives, and the narrative shifts locations and time to go down two possible paths for Dawn, and the ancient Egyptian beliefs and text of The Book of Two Ways on the path towards reaching the afterlife. She is beset with regrets on the one hand and what could have been with Wyatt, and a marriage which is under pressure, raising the issues of what constitutes a 'love affair' and infidelity. Dawn works as a death doula, helping her terminal clients prepare for death with compassion and love, and supporting grieving families, clients such as Win, whose issues resonate so strongly with Dawn too.

Picoult writes of the complexities of being human, the choices we make, the people that matter in her story of life, love and death, and extolling the need to live life now through her central protagonist, Dawn. She excels in her characterisation of Dawn and the painful, messy complications that life so often comprises of, with her reflections on what could have been, her sense of identity and who exactly she is. This is richly descriptive and heavily detailed, multilayered storytelling, thoughtful, insightful and well written on life's deepest questions but will not be for everyone. An emotionally satisfying and touching novel that I recommend highly to others. Many thanks to Hodder and Stoughton for an ARC.


Taylor Reid

Rating: really liked it
I also got to meet Jodi Picoult this past month (on Zoom but it still counts!) and gosh, I love her. Want to dive headfirst into Egyptian tombs? Jodi’s research is unbelievable. She puts you right there, on the front lines of archaeological digs, like you're right next to Indiana Jones. And, no surprise, it’s great. It’s a thoughtful, accessible, brilliant, and thought-provoking look at the meaning of life—and what we do to give our lives meaning.


ScrappyMags

Rating: really liked it
Mummies, love, and a plane crash - oh my!

Shortest Summary Ever: Dawn Edelstein nearly dies in a plane crash. This moment draws her back to Egypt where she left her former life behind (and a man named Wyatt) 15 years ago. Then there’s Bryan and her daughter Meret back in Boston - the life she’s created that’s also dear. Where should she go?

Thoughts: I love Picoult when she’s not giving the expected, and so I enjoyed this book. To keep my review spoiler free I can say this - it’s brutally honest, which is brave and ballsy. I absolutely love honestly. I don’t need “perfect” or I’d be reading romance (barf). The characters aren’t infallible - they are human, and humans are full of imperfection. I LOVE THAT. I have never married so for me it was enjoyable to sit on both paths - a life with Brian her steady true hubby, or what life would be like with “the one who got away.” I could easily put myself in these characters’ clothes, try em on for size, and stroll around for a while. Riveting and thought-inducing to try those outfits on.

Picoult’s characterization is her brilliance - she’s able to make the reader see and feel every side of this story down to 14-yr old Meret and her discomfort with her body, Brian and his steadfastness in his marriage, Wyatt and his facade of confidence, and Dawn and her questioning of everything that is LIFE. Damn that’s good.

The book is cerebral which is also tough to pull off. I’m a thinker and I’m pretty smart (don’t let the snark fool ya... I graduated Summa Cum Laude suckas!) so I enjoyed the LEARNING... but that brings me to my one star deduction.
I adored the information about what the book of Two Ways was, its meaning, the Egyptology (I Googled soooooo much stuff!), until it became ad nauseam Egyptology where every emotion Dawn was feeling had to be compared to some old dead dude and his wife. Then quantum physics was sprinkled in and flashback dashes of philosophy class (ugh I hated that class)... it seemed too jumbled in some places. But I FEEL crazy smart now and it’s the first time I’ve understood ANYTHING physics (don’t judge).


All my reviews available at scrappymags.com around time of publication.

Genre: Contemporary Fiction/Women’s Fiction/Chic-Lit

Recommend to: You have to be ready for cerebral because you’ll be schooled.

Not recommended to: It’s not a quick and done so be ready.

Thank you to the author, Random House Ballantyne, and Netgalley for the ARC in exchange for my always-honest review and for the education in all things Egypt tombs.


Kaceey

Rating: really liked it
After my first read by Jodi Picoult Small Great Things, which received a multitude of 5-star reviews (including mine), I was excited to get started on her latest release.

Unfortunately, I may have chosen the wrong book to continue the journey. There were so many reviews revealing the primary focus was on Egyptology, while the storyline itself got lost along the way.

Sadly, I couldn’t agree more.

Even though I went in with an open mind, willing to discover something new, it began feeling more like a text book. As though I was back in University looking for the lecture hall for contemporary fiction but ending up in Egyptology 101. Still I tried to power through, though admittedly my mind wandered. So much so I found myself skimming the history lesson and just trying to piece together the rest of the story.

I’m not giving up on this author! Susanne just gifted me seven of her previous novels, now on my shelf waiting for me (us).
I just know this one wasn’t the right fit for me.

A buddy read with Susanne.

Thank you to NetGalley and Random House Publishing Group - Ballantine Publishing for an ARC to read and review.


Barbara

Rating: really liked it


When she was in her mid-twenties, Dawn McDowell was a Ph.D. candidate in the Yale Egyptology program....



.....headed by Professor Dumphries, who led the department's dig at Deir el-Bersha.



Dawn and fellow graduate student, Wyatt Armstrong - a handsome, golden-haired Brit....



.....rubbed each other the wrong way from day one, each vying to be the best and the brightest, and competing to be Dumphries' favorite.

Dawn and Wyatt sniped at each other constantly until the day they discovered a depinto - an inscription in hieroglyphics - beneath a rock ledge.



The depinto revealed the existence of a previously unknown tomb, and in their excitement - when Wyatt wrapped his arms around Dawn and spun her around - the two became friends....and then fell madly in love.



Dawn and Wyatt's area of study was 'The Book of Two Ways', an inscription in Egyptian tombs that depicts two paths to the afterlife, an upper water path and a lower land path. The deceased travels down one of the pathways, meeting guardians and watchers who prevent unworthy sinners from passing.


Illustration of The Book of Two Ways


The Book of Two Ways inscribed on the bottom of a coffin

Dawn and Wyatt, who seemed to be made for each other, made an excellent romantic AND research team. They pictured themselves together, leading digs; unearthing tombs; interpreting hieroglyphics; publishing articles; etc.



Then the unthinkable happened. Dawn learned her mother was in a hospice, dying of ovarian cancer. Dawn rushed home to Boston to care for her mother, who died a few weeks later. This made Dawn guardian of her 13-year-old brother Kieran, a responsibility Dawn took very seriously.



Thus, Dawn withdrew from the Egyptology program; met physicist Brian Edelstein; got pregnant; got married; became a death doula (a person who helps the dying at the end of their lives); and didn't say a word about any of it to Wyatt.

*****

We first meet Dawn fifteen years later, when her life is much different than what she pictured in Egypt. Dawn is married to physicist Brian Edelstein, a caring solicitous spouse who teaches at Harvard;



Dawn and Brian are raising their 14-year-old daughter Meret, a science whiz who attends summer STEM camp;



and Dawn is helping her client Win, a dying artist, peacefully approach her last moments.



Dawn's life takes a dramatic turn when Brian gets too cozy with an attractive graduate student and Win tells Dawn about her lost first love, whom she never forgot. Dawn feels compelled to go back to Egypt, find Wyatt, and continue studying the Book of Two Ways.



As Dawn navigates her life she's torn between Wyatt and her Egyptology studies on the one hand (the land path), and Brian and Meret on the other hand (the water path). That's the basic theme of the book.

The story moves back and forth in time, alternating between events fifteen years ago and events in the present. Some of the time jumps are purposely tricky. leading to twists I didn't see coming.

A Jodi Picoult novel is never simple, and the book includes a good bit of chitchat about ancient Egypt, physics, the responsibilities of a death doula, and Irish superstitions.

The ancient Egypt sections include discussions of Egyptian gods; beliefs; tombs; inscriptions; hieroglyphics; pharaohs; kings; queens; brothers; sisters; incest (which was common); marriages; burial rites; the afterlife; etc. It's like a mini-textbook about ancient Egypt.


Display of an ancient Egyptian tomb

The physics sections are about quantum mechanics and multiverses - the idea that there are infinite universes with parallel timelines. Thus I might be a physics professor giving a lecture in one timeline; a cab driver in a car crash in a second timeline; a ballerina rehearsing with the Bolshoi in a third timeline, married to my first boyfriend in a fourth timeline....you get the idea.



The duties of a death doula are exemplified by Dawn's recollections of former clients and her day-to-day care of Win. Death doula responsibilities can include helping the client declutter the house; make a will; plan a funeral; visit favorite places; write letters; comfort relatives; and so on. Whatever the client wants that's not medical-related.



The Irish superstitions are among the more light-hearted parts of the book. Dawn's mother was a VERY superstitious Irishwoman with a strong belief in the supernatural. She put safety pins in Dawn's clothing to ward off the evil eye; taught Dawn never to whistle indoors; instructed Dawn to look in a mirror if she left the house and had to come back in; made Dawn pay a penny after she gave her a Swiss Army Knife for Christmas; told Dawn she'd never get married if she sat in the corner at the table; and so on. These rituals are meant to insure good luck and prevent harm, and Dawn brings them up - usually in fun - as the occasion arises.



I found the 'extra bits' of the novel interesting, but some reviewers think the Egyptology and physics chatter is excessive and boring.

I enjoyed the book and was engrossed in Dawn's dilemma.....whether to choose Wyatt or Brian. You might be tempted to get judgy, but read the book first. 😊

Thanks to Netgalley, the author (Jodi Picoult), and the publisher (Ballantine Books) for a copy of the book.

You can follow my reviews at https://reviewsbybarbsaffer.blogspot....


Marialyce (absltmom, yaya)

Rating: really liked it
There are times that a book just seems to come at just the right moment. Perhaps it is because of a life situation, a death or birth, or just because one finds themselves at a junction in life where the subject matter hits home with multiple punches. I have a 94 year old mother who is frail and as I read this book my thoughts constantly drifted to her and the end of life choices she and I will eventually need to make. Death is an absolute. None of us escape death, none of us return from it, none of us know what awaits us.

Dawn Edelstein is studying to be an Egyptologist. She is a young woman on the cusp of fulfilling a dream when a phone call comes that changes forever the direction her life will take. Her mother is dying, and even though she has fallen in love with Wyatt Armstrong, another Egyptologist, she rushes home to be with her mother and her young brother at this stressful time. She will not return to Egypt to the land and the man she loves as duty to her mother and brother prevail.

Dawn meets a man, a quantum physicist, Brian, who is brilliant and explores the concept that we, as living things could in theory live in alternate universes where are choices are different, and our lives are not ones we are now experiencing. They have a child, a daughter, and eventually marry but there is always at the back of Dawn's thoughts the idea of Wyatt. Dawn loves her husband but with a love not equal to that she shared with Wyatt. Will her love for Brian win the day or is Wyatt the person she can't live without?

These are multiple themes explored in this story. The concept of ancient Egyptians's belief in an afterlife and preparation for it was fascinating. Dawn's eventual job as a death doula offered a unique and heart felt perspective into how we can prepare one for their demise. And ...what if we were able to live an alternate life? Would we have been with the person who first filled our life and our soul with his or her love? How many of us have thought back and wondered what road we would have traveled if our life followed the pathway of a first love? Where are these first loves now?

I found the book to be utterly fascinating and it touched my emotional core and made me think and wonder and reflect. Do we actually at the end of our days wonder what if? Do we come to terms with the life we lead or do we constantly think perhaps if only.

I absolutely loved this story, its message, its cautionary warning that life is fleeting and how we need to grab onto the moments that thrill us. There is much spoken of in this book of the ancient Egyptian stories and rituals of long ago with their plethora of gods, paths to follow, and rituals. I was fortunate in understanding this section, since I taught a unit on Egypt for many years to the many classes that passed through my teaching life. It fascinated me drew me back to the wonder and joy my students and I experienced exploring and learning of what came before us.

I most definitely recommend this book for all the ways it might conjure up your thoughts, make you see a reality that perhaps you didn't chose, and realize that all of us will eventually face a life that will come to an end. It's the road we travel that we see in the end, its joy, its sorrows and perhaps the people we left behind along the way.

Thank you to NetGalley for a copy of this book due out on September 22, 2020.


Debra

Rating: really liked it
3.5 stars

"Life asked death, 'Why do people love me but hate you? ‘Death responded 'Because you are a beautiful lie and I am a painful truth." -Unknown

Prepare for a Crash Landing. Everything changes for Dawn Edelstein when she is on a plane preparing to crash. As the plane goes down her thoughts are on Wyatt Armstrong, a man she loved and last saw 15 years ago, she does not think of her husband Brian or the life they had in Boston with their daughter, Merit.

Dawn is an interesting woman. She gave up her dream of being an Egyptologist, when she received word that her mother was dying, and she needed to leave Egypt and return home. There she had to prepare for her Mother's death and raise her much younger brother. She had to leave Egypt and Wyatt behind. She meets Brian soon thereafter and the rest as they say, is history. Now a death Douala with a teenage daughter, her universe is about to change.

"My heart is no longer in my body."

It is obvious from reading this book that a tremendous amount of research went into the writing of this book. There is A LOT of Egyptian history, which I enjoyed at times and other times muddled through it, but all the while I reminded myself that this was her two characters passion. It is what they did. This is what they talked about, it was for one, his life's work. There is also talk of Quantum physics - parallel universes, etc. Then I was introduced to the career of the Death Douala which blew me away and I found to be very compelling and interesting.

Overall, this was an interesting and entirely different book. Very original with some beautiful passages. Dawn's story is told through the past and present. We are introduced to those in her life and her relationships with them. This book touches on many themes such as: life, death, choices, the what-ifs, the afterlife, loss and happiness.

This was a hard one to rate because; although interesting, sometimes getting through all the Egyptian history felt like work. She did her research and it showed. When you walk two paths in life, which one do you ultimately choose? Which will Dawn?

"Look, if you had One shot... Or one opportunity... To seize everything, you ever wanted ...In one moment... Would you capture it... Or just let it slip?" -Eminem

The Book of Two Ways is both a rewarding and frustrating book. In the end, I am glad I read it and enjoyed it. It did take some work, but I found it to be well worth it. I learned a lot and appreciated the messages about life and death. Some of her passages were quite beautiful. I think this would make an interesting book club book as there is a lot to discuss.

Thank you to Random House Ballantine and NetGalley who provided me with a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. All the thoughts and opinions are my own.



Kasa Cotugno

Rating: really liked it
A reader picks up a Jodi Picoult novel for specific reasons. A story well told containing some mystery, with enclosed life lessons and usually a twist they didn't see coming. This novel, sadly, has none of that. I'm afraid she seems to have jumped the shark, or several sharks as the case may be. Much the same as with James Michener in later years, there doesn't seem to have been much editing going on here -- great swaths of pages that repeat needlessly. Both storylines are bloated with detail and description that stall the plot, plus two romantic entanglements with exceptional, well educated men who are over the moon for the narrator, and that plot line gets old. Fast. If I hadn't had to write a review, I wouldn't have finished it..


Susanne

Rating: really liked it
Do you ever have those nightmares where you didn’t actually graduate University because you missed a few credits? Reading this book made me feel like I failed classes in Egyptology and Quantum Physics and therefore failed out of College.

This novel is about Dawn, a woman whose life is unfulfilled, even though she is married to Brian and has a teenaged daughter. Years prior, in college, she met and fell for Wyatt who she has never forgotten.

When the plane Dawn is on crashes, she has an opportunity: she can go back home or she can take a trip down memory lane, to Wyatt.

While I loved the first few pages of this novel all of which took place in New Haven, CT, a mere skip and a hop away from my hometown of Woodbridge and loved Dawn visiting all of my old haunts, once this novel delved into Egyptology I was completely lost.

The split past v present storyline was well done and somewhat intriguing and while I did find some part of this storyline and the characters to be enjoyable, on the whole, I skimmed through much of the story which felt like reading a University textbook.

On the whole, having read every single book Jodi Piccoult has written, “The Book of Two Ways” is my least favorite novel this author has written. I struggled to get through this and hope that the author returns to her tried and true the next time around.

This was another buddy read with Kaceey.

Thank you to NetGalley, Random House Publishing Group - Ballantine and Jodi Piccoult for the arc.

Published on Goodreads on 11.24.20.

Review also posted to blog: https://books-are-a-girls-best-friend...


Liz

Rating: really liked it
Nothing like a plane crash to make you re-think your life. That’s what happens to Dawn. She is one of 36 survivors to walk away from a crash. She uses the opportunity to fly anywhere by the airline to return to Egypt. Fifteen years ago, she was a grad student helping with a dig at Deir el-Bersha. Now, she’s a death doula with a husband and daughter.
Picoult uses The Book of Two Ways, the Egyptian “guidebook” for the afterlife as a metaphor about the choices we make while on earth. Because maybe she didn’t go to Egypt. Maybe she just returned home to deal with life as she knows it, to try and fix her marriage and be there for her teenage daughter. The plot swirls on this alternative universe idea. “In one world I’m in Boston. In another world, I am with Wyatt when he opens that coffin and sees The Book of Two Ways.” I found it interesting that I had trouble with the one version of Dawn. I saw her as being selfish. But then, there comes a point in the story where she explains herself and I totally got it.
Picoult makes sure to provide the reader with a lot of background on both hieroglyphics and quantum mechanics. While I’m a sucker for all this detail, it might prove too much for others. There’s lots of philosophical talk about death and dying, but it’s not depressing. The book focuses on finding purpose and meaning in life. It also focuses on love - first loves, sustaining loves. How just because we move on from someone doesn’t mean we ever forget them.
I haven’t read a lot of Jodi Picoult. But this feels like a departure from what I picture when I think of one of her books. Yes, it’s still character driven. But her other books have a big ordeal, usually a controversial topic. Here, it’s much more internal, personal choice driven. So, it comes across as a quieter book, if that makes sense. But I loved the points she makes - that love often means hurting someone, that there are no perfect choices.
My thanks to netgalley and Random House for an advance copy of this book.


Chris

Rating: really liked it
I love the way that Jodi Picoult continues to grow and explore new narrative structures: moving backwards in time in "A Spark of Light" a la "Time's Arrow," or offering us a nonlinear examination of one woman's exploration of "what might have been" in her latest novel, "The Book of Two Ways." And "what might have been" is indeed the crux of this emotionally rich and complex novel. Some of the small moments of families in crisis in Massachusetts are tender and wistful -- the protagonist's family, but also the family of the woman she helps care for as a death doula -- while the bigger moments in Egypt are rich with the history of how another, distant culture handled death and dying. I know I'll be pondering the arc and the revelations for a while, and savoring every moment of those contemplations.