Thursday, August 30, 2018

Book review: The Possible World by Liese O'Halloran Schwarz

The Possible World
By Liese O’Halloran Schwarz
Simon and Schuster


This novel brings together three seemingly disconnected stories – an emergency room doctor, an elderly woman in a care home and a young boy suffering with anxiety – and brings them together in a complex and compelling story.
Lucy is the ER doc, who finds herself newly single as she works a gruelling night shift schedule. Ben is the young boy, who witnesses a brutal murder and appears to have amnesia due to the shock. Clare is the elderly woman, who might be the oldest person in her small town at nearly 100 years old, but who also appears to have no evidence of her birthdate.
This is not a murder mystery – the perpetrator becomes known quite quickly and simply after the crime. Rather, it is a story of life – three lives to be exact – and how people can form connections and how they can lose those same connections.
O’Halloran Schwarz is an emergency-medicine doctor herself, working in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Readers will recognize the accuracy in her descriptions of what it’s like to work an ER, including one hilarious scene that is sure to surprise.
Not only did The Possible World make this reviewer laugh, it also made me cry in its universal wisdom about the bonds between us and how ephemeral or enduring they can be. A beautifully written novel, The Possible World is a story that will enrich its readers.
Tracy.sherlock@gmail.com





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