When a plot of land is being developed in Vermont against the will of a local Native American tribe, strange things begin to happen - and Ross Wakeman, a paranormal investigator, is asked to get involved. He's a desperate drifter who's taken up ghost hunting in an effort to cross paths again with his fiancee, who died in a car crash eight years ago, but he has yet to experience anything even remotely paranormal. Then Ross meets Lia . . . As a seventy-year-old murder case is reopened, a shocking secret about a crime of passion long past is revealed.
In Second Glance, Picoult pits science against the supernatural, and examines why we tend to think of science as objective, when it is always at the mercy of those who interpret it. Is fate any more reliable than coincidence? And is love any less real just because it has no scale of measurement?
Jodi Picoult's eeriest and most engrossing work yet, this is a story about the things that come back to haunt us - literally and metaphorically.
Second Glance
First published in 2003, I seemed to have missed reading this one . I didn't enjoy the last couple of her novels, so was pleased to hear my Mum say that she had enjoyed this one ,so I thought I would give it a go. Set between the years 1932 and 2001 it tells the story of Ross Wakeman a paranormal investigator, who suffered a tragic loss and has been involved in ghost hunting to try and see his fiance once again. He is suicidal at times, as he has not experienced any paranormal activity, so he returns to stay with his sister and nephew in a small town in Vermont. Here he has his first experience, meeting Lia the resident ghost who doesn't realize she is dead, and becomes involved in a seventy year old murder case. The story switches back and forth between 1932 when Lia meet her death and 2001 ,as Ross try's to find out what happened and give peace to Lia, and hopefully himself. As always with Jodi Picoult you are waiting for the twist towards the end and I wasn't disappointed. one of her best . Most enjoyable read . - Sue
Woodgrove, 10/05/2016