I was introduced to Chris Bohjalian’s writing through my mom, who read his book, Midwives, when it was hot on Oprah’s Book Club list and who later recommended that I read it (but not until after I’d already delivered my first child). Several years later I read another of his books and enjoyed it as much as the first, but it’s taken me another year to read another. This third book piqued my interest because it deals with the science of homeopathy, a healing art that I briefly researched in college and have maintained an interest in ever since.
I enjoyed this book, if more for the storyline and its believability than for the writing. This is the story of a mid-30s widowed father and public attorney in Vermont who comes down with a cold that lasts for well over six months, and for which he desperately turns to a local homeopath for a cure. What follows is the story of how his experience with homeopathy varies so widely from another man’s experience and interpretation of how homeopathy heals on the principle that “like cures like”, and the aftermath of allowing himself to fall in love for the first time since his wife died.
What distracted me from the story was Bohjalian’s repeated use of the phrase, “And so”. He not only uses this two-word combination in the middle of his sentences, but also when beginning sentences and paragraphs, and with a frequency that made me cringe every time I saw it written yet again. I’m probably only sensitive to this because I tend to use that phrase to begin my own sentences in my own writing, but the difference between us is that I write casual and widely unread blog posts, and this is a novel in which more formal writing is called for and is deserved. If I hadn’t read other, better formed, works by Bohjalian this detail alone might have turned me off of reading anything else by him, and I believe that he has since corrected this issue, given that this book was published over a decade ago.
Don’t let my editorial criticism of this small detail keep you from reading this book, though. If you’ve read and enjoyed any of Jodi Picoult’s works, it’s likely that you’ll also enjoy books by Bohjalian, as they cover many of the same legal/medical parameters that she often centers her books around