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Powell's Staff: New Literature in Translation: June 2022 (0 comment)
June is one of my favorite months, especially here in Portland, where the weather can be beautiful and sunny one minute and a gray downpour with threats of thunder the next. It’s important to always be prepared to take advantage of those rainy afternoons, with a good mug of tea and a great book. Below, we’ve rounded up some of the books in translation released this past month....
Read More»
  • Phuc Tran: “Scene But Not Herd”: Phuc Tran's Playlist for 'Sigh, Gone' (0 comment)
  • Kendra James: Powell's Q&A: Kendra James, author of 'Admissions' (0 comment)

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State of Wonder

by Patchett, Ann
State of Wonder

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ISBN13: 9780062049803
ISBN10: 0062049801
Condition: Standard
DustJacket: Standard

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From Powells.com

  1. Featured in Indiespensable Volume 27!
  2. Powell's subscription club offers signed first editions, exclusive content, and unique handpicked gifts.

Staff Pick

What if women could become pregnant into their 70s? What if a woman's fertility could be increased exponentially? What if the ever-encroaching biological clock disappeared? Ann Patchett takes us deep into the Amazon in search of answers to these questions in her latest novel.

The amazingly long fertility window in the female members of the Lakashi Amazonian tribe is the subject of study for a group of doctors. When head researcher Dr. Swenson, after a decade of study, refuses to come home, share her work, or even report back to her bosses, Dr. Eckman, is sent in after her. When Dr. Eckman turns up dead, Dr. Singh is sent in to bring back his body, but also to shake loose Dr. Swenson's research results. What follows is a terrific story of survival, curiosity, culture shock and acclimation, as Dr. Singh makes her way through the jungle and finally tracks down Dr. Swenson. A story thread involving a deaf-mute child, who has somehow defected from a rival tribe, is sweet and eventually astonishing.

Patchett has laser-like insight into her characters; they never feel anything less than real. With anacondas, a hailstorm of arrows, unsanitary surgery, big-business-pharmaceutical greed, ethnocentric interference, and a great story buoyed by wonderful characters, this is a must-read. Recommended By Dianah H., Powells.com

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments

Ann Patchett has dazzled readers with her award-winning books, including The Magician's Assistant and the New York Times bestselling Bel Canto. Now she raises the bar with State of Wonder, a provocative and ambitious novel set deep in the Amazon jungle.

Dr. Marina Singh, a research scientist with a Minnesota pharmaceutical company, is sent to Brazil to track down her former mentor, Dr. Annick Swenson, who seems to have all but disappeared in the Amazon while working on what is destined to be an extremely valuable new drug, the development of which has already cost the company a fortune. Nothing about Marina's assignment is easy: not only does no one know where Dr. Swenson is, but the last person who was sent to find her, Marina's research partner Anders Eckman, died before he could complete his mission. Plagued by trepidation, Marina embarks on an odyssey into the insect-infested jungle in hopes of finding her former mentor as well as answers to several troubling questions about her friend's death, the state of her company's future, and her own past.

Once found, Dr. Swenson, now in her seventies, is as ruthless and uncompromising as she ever was back in the days of Grand Rounds at Johns Hopkins. With a combination of science and subterfuge, she dominates her research team and the natives she is studying with the force of an imperial ruler. But while she is as threatening as anything the jungle has to offer, the greatest sacrifices to be made are the ones Dr. Swenson asks of herself, and will ultimately ask of Marina, who finds she may still be unable to live up to her teacher's expectations.

In a narrative replete with poison arrows, devouring snakes, and a neighboring tribe of cannibals, State of Wonder is a world unto itself, where unlikely beauty stands beside unimaginable loss. It is a tale that leads the reader into the very heart of darkness, and then shows us what lies on the other side.

Review

"Expect miracles when you read Ann Patchett's fiction." New York Times Book Review

Review

"Ann Patchett, who held readers captive with Bel Canto, her 2001 novel about a famous opera singer and a group of international dignitaries taken hostage by Latin American terrorists, is back in form with her mesmerizing sixth novel, State of Wonder. Set in the Amazon rain forest, Patchett's new book is a dramatic, transportive adventure story that takes on issues of medical ethics, cultural respect, friendship, love and loyalty." Heller McAlpin, NPR (Read the entire NPR review)

Synopsis

Expect miracles when you read Ann Patchett s fiction. New York Times Book Review

Award-winning, New York Times bestselling author Ann Patchett returns with a provocative and assured novel of morality and miracles, science and sacrifice set in the Amazon rainforest. Infusing the narrative with the same ingenuity and emotional urgency that pervaded her acclaimed previous novels Bel Canto, Taft, Run, The Magician s Assistant, and The Patron Saint of Liars, Patchett delivers an enthrallingly innovative tale of aspiration, exploration, and attachment in State of Wonder a gripping adventure story and a profound look at the difficult choices we make in the name of discovery and love. "

Synopsis

From New York Times bestselling author Ann Patchett comes State of Wonder, a provocative and assured novel of morality and miracles; science and sacrifice, set in the Amazon rainforest. Full of remarkable events-fights with anacondas; encounters with cannibals; deaths; re-births-and profound moral decisions come together in a novel that will enthrall your students.

"Patchett is a master storyteller who has an entertaining habit of dropping ordinary people into extraordinary and exotic circumstances to see what they're made of. An] expansive page-turner . . . Patchett's fluid prose dissolves in the suspense of this out-there adventure...that readers will hate to see end."-Publishers Weekly (starred review)

Synopsis

A New York Times Bestseller; Orange Prize nominee; a Time Magazine's Best Books of the Year; a Publisher's Weekly's Best Top Ten Best Books; and a Wellcome Trust Book Prize nominee.

"Expect miracles when you read Ann Patchett's fiction."--New York Times Book Review

Award-winning, New York Times bestselling author Ann Patchett returns with a provocative and assured novel of morality and miracles, science and sacrifice set in the Amazon rainforest.

Marina Singh is a research scientist at Vogel, a pharmaceutical institute in Minnesota, and inconveniently in love with her boss, Mr. Fox. When one of her colleagues is reported to have died while following up on the progress of a field team based in Brazil, Marina is dispatched by Mr. Fox to the Amazon to uncover the truth of his death. And his widow wants his effects. She travels to Manaus, then down into the Amazonian delta, deep into the dense, dark, insect-infested jungle. The research team is looking into the development of a new miracle drug that could revolutionize Western society. A local tribe has the bark of a certain tree, it yields a substance which allows them to conceive late into middle age: many of the women are getting pregnant into their sixties and seventies. The problem is that the team is taking too long: they have been silent for two years, and Marina has been tasked to find out what is holding back their progress. The second problem is more serious: the team is being headed up by the daunting figure of Annick Swenson, an eminent and fiercely uncompromising scientist who was once Marina's colleague, and towards whom Marina has very complicated feelings. What Marina learns will change her life. In a novel that is packed with amazing twists and surprises, Ann Patchett returns with immense confidence to a broad canvas, teeming with atmosphere and characters and rich with narrative. Remarkable events--fights with anacondas; encounters with cannibals; deaths; re-births--and profound moral decisions come together in a novel that will enthrall her many readers and fans and is guaranteed to be a major bestseller.

Infusing the narrative with the same ingenuity and emotional urgency that pervaded her acclaimed previous novels Bel Canto, Taft, Run, The Magician's Assistant, and The Patron Saint of Liars, Patchett delivers an enthralling, innovative tale of aspiration, exploration, and attachment in State of Wonder--a gripping adventure story and a profound look at the difficult choices we make in the name of discovery and love.

Synopsis

Bestselling author Ann Patchett returns with a provocative and assured novel of morality and miracles, science and sacrifice set in the Amazon rainforest. Infusing the narrative with the same ingenuity and emotional urgency that pervaded her acclaimed previous novels Bel Canto, Taft,Run, The Magician's Assistant, and The Patron Saint of Liars, Patchett delivers an enthrallingly innovative tale of aspiration, exploration, and attachment in State of Wonder — a gripping adventure story and a profound look at the difficult choices we make in the name of discovery and love.

About the Author

Ann Patchett is the author of five novels: the New York Times bestselling Run; The Patron Saint of Liars, which was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year; Taft, which won the Janet Heidinger Kafka Prize; The Magician's Assistant; and Bel Canto, which won the PEN/Faulkner Award, the Orange Prize, the BookSense Book of the Year, and was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. She is also the author of two works of nonfiction: the New York Times bestselling Truth & Beauty and What now? Patchett has written for many publications, including the Atlantic Monthly, Harper's Magazine, Gourmet, the New York Times, Vogue, and the Washington Post. She lives in Nashville, Tennessee.

4.8 91

What Our Readers Are Saying

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Average customer rating 4.8 (91 comments)

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Pamela Ann Miller , January 30, 2013
One of the best books I have read the last two years. I am nominating it for the 2013 Puddly Award

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Joan Radoll , January 30, 2013 (view all comments by Joan Radoll)
I loved the journey (literally and figuratively) that Ann Patchett took me on in this book. I find her books so compelling and this was no different. I loved that I was totally surprised at the ending!

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Dorothy Renstrom , January 02, 2013
Great read.

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Michael Russell , January 01, 2013
Best book read all year! Beautiful prose.

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Anne in Eugene , January 01, 2013 (view all comments by Anne in Eugene)
Loved this book. We read it for our book club and it was a unanimous favorite.

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encelia , January 01, 2013
Certainly one of the most thought provoking reads of the last several years, and entertaining as well. Read on vacation.

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library lover , January 01, 2013 (view all comments by library lover)
Captivating! The character development is extraordinary.

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Barbara Bartschi , January 01, 2013
She is a writer worth following.

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CASplan , January 01, 2013 (view all comments by CASplan)
Interesting, engaging characters that were not predictable in the least. Fascinating setting (the Amazon). And plot turns that I never saw coming. I really hated for this story to end.

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Elizabeth L , March 02, 2012 (view all comments by Elizabeth L)
This was one of those books that really made me miss taking college English classes. It's so rich with symbolism, imagery, metaphor -- it begs for a great class discussion (not to mention the obvious parallels with Heart of Darkness). This is my first Patchett novel, and I'm very much looking forward to reading Bel Canto now. Her characters are richly drawn and the plot and setting of this novel are at once unique and familiar, making you feel as if you have access to a world and lifestyle that you'd never otherwise know. Highly recommended.

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Holly Prochaska , January 29, 2012
This book worried me; I love the beginning, I loved the middle, would I love the end? Yes! Perfect from beginning, to middle, to end. Thank you Powell's for making it one of the indiespensables.

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Heppsuba , January 23, 2012
A superb read in all respects. My favorite from this author.

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John Erickson , January 21, 2012
This book has it all: good writing, places I like knowing more about, and a thoughtful elucidation of techno-pharma progress vs the rights and wonders of indigenous cultures. This tale, like one of LeGuin's best (or Jung's) takes us to a sacred place we realize we understand as it is revealed. Kudos!! Thank-you very much to Ms. Patchett, and to Powell's for including it in your book o' the month subscription.

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m3marsden , January 19, 2012
Once again, Ann Patchett takes the oddest scenarios and makes them fascinating! I read this book months ago, and I am still thinking about it.

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Lisa Tantillo , January 19, 2012
Beautifully written with a plot that takes your breath away.

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Kelly L , January 19, 2012 (view all comments by Kelly L)
I will read anything written by Ann Patchett because of her beautiful, lucid use of language, her highly realized characters and setting, and the way that the stories she tells lodge so firmly in my mind and memory. In State of Wonder, her most recent novel, Patchett returns us to South America and the opera, but in a wholly different way than in Bel Canto. Marina travels to the Amazon to check up on the progress of a new developmental drug after her colleague disappears and is presumed dead. In doing so, she confronts her former med school teacher and discovers a hidden truth about the strange fertility of the native people. Again Patchett has delivered a novel whose character undergoes a journey of truth and tragedy. State of Wonder is a brilliant story that will reward multiple readings and rightly deserves its nominations and awards.

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Krista Kabacy , January 19, 2012 (view all comments by Krista Kabacy)
This is another excellent novel by one of my favorite writers. The medical-pharmaceutical concepts, the jungle setting and the character relationships are fascinating. This book is such a page-turner, it would certainly make an excellent movie!

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Kathleen Duke , January 19, 2012
Maybe not quite as lyrical as Bel Canto, State of Wonder more than compensates with its fascinatingly layered plot. Unlike religion or politics or hollywood, it deals honestly with the painful ambiguity surrounding life's most important issues, instead of radically simplifying them for our comfort.

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gordenes , January 19, 2012
By far my favorite book of 2011! Initially the premise didn't catch my attention (pharmaceutical research in the Amazon? thank you, no), but I'm a fan of Ann Patchett, so I gave it a chance and I was not disappointed. Patchett has managed to combine bestseller-thriller pacing with the most beautiful, lyrical descriptions and complex characters. It's poignant, original, sometimes shocking, and absurdly funny. I literally could not put it down from start to finish; at one point I was stirring dinner one-handed on the stove while continuing to turn pages with the other. Do yourself a favor: clear your schedule for a day or two, and then hurry to your local Powell's to get a copy of State of Wonder.

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Kathleen Kane , January 19, 2012 (view all comments by Kathleen Kane)
A beautiful book that evokes wonder and a renewed spirit in the human condition.

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pinetree , January 19, 2012
Amazing blue trees! Easy to get lured in.

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margaret d , January 19, 2012
Enjoyed this book. Science, ethics and adventure.

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Mally , January 19, 2012
This book held my attention every step of the way. It was full of surprises and I wanted to be inside the main Characters life, living her Amazon adventure. The author always does this with her books even if the situations are unbearable. How does she do that?

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Jeano , January 19, 2012
A book to think about and talk about for a long time.

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FELICE , January 19, 2012 (view all comments by FELICE)
I am a BIG Anne Patchett fan and "State of Wonder" was worth the wait -- a modern retelling of "Heart of Darkness" with big pharma evil, delusional scientific researchers, savvy natives and jungle adventure with a few Janes, not Tarzan, as the heroines. Maybe. While I was not crazy about the ending of the novel, part of that may have well been because I was also so entertained and intrigued that I did not want it to end. Highly recommended.

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goldenemma , January 19, 2012 (view all comments by goldenemma)
I was completely engaged by the world created in State of Wonder while experiencing the anxieties of the well-drawn characters.

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readerab , January 19, 2012 (view all comments by readerab)
A trip down the Amazon, ethical dilemmas and humor - all well-written.

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soybean , January 17, 2012
I loved this book so much that I went directly from the last page to the first page again. A truly absorbing, generous, rewarding read!

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Julie Humphrey , January 12, 2012
I am so pleased to have discovered Ann Patchett. I couldn't put this book down. I especially liked the ethical and cultural questions this book raised.

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salliforth , January 11, 2012 (view all comments by salliforth)
Artfully written, with such an inventive plot, Ann Patchett outdoes herself - again. "State of Wonder" tackles such issues as the price of comfort, passions that blind, true human connection, the force and levels of greed, the effects of curiosity and pride, and the mysterious course of nature and so much more. I wanted to discuss this book with someone when I finished - a perfect book club book

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Anne Pardington , January 09, 2012 (view all comments by Anne Pardington)
One can always expect a book by Ann Patchett to be especially enjoyable, and this one is even entrancing, with a combination of science, adventure, and love supported by what must have been extensive research.

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Aimee Bonneval , January 06, 2012 (view all comments by Aimee Bonneval)
Very good read, with decent character development and an interesting plot.

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LadyD , January 05, 2012
I love Ann Patchetts writing and this book did not disappoint. The exotic location and the weaving of the storylines of the various characters kept the book exciting.

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jessmonster , January 05, 2012
I can't recommend this highly enough to readers who enjoy setting and character-driven stories. The plot description can sound tantalizing, but it's not really very action packed, dealing more with ethical ambiguities, a complex web of personalities and choices, and a setting that reaches out and grabs you. With Patchett you know she'll never quite spare you the difficult moment, but neither will she give you an unbearably bleak ending. The result will be something in between, the kind of story that's difficult to leave behind and that begs rereading.

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BookAddict , January 04, 2012 (view all comments by BookAddict)
This book was given to me as a gift, so when I started reading I had no idea of what to expect. I never expected to find characters as rich and layered, yet surprisingly normal, as the people that Ann Patchet created. I was taken aback by the depth that she gave to each character and to each scene. The Amazon truly came alive for me as I read the book and I couldn't put it down. The end is so startlingly that several days later I am still struck by it. A wonderful book that you should definitely read.

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Andrea Mehigan , January 04, 2012
Ann Patchett has pulled off another amazing effort with State of Wonder. The incredible plot concerning a lab researcher lost in the Amazon rain forest while investigating a tree bark that keeps women fertile into old age; his colleague who is commissioned to go to the jungle to find out what happened to her co-worker; and the wondrous happenings she finds once she arrives - all combine for one fantastic story. The characters are real and absorbing, the writing deft and done well. I was truly hanging onto the edge of my seat throughout, and sad when the story was over and I could no longer follow the characters and story line. Highly recommended!

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Pamela Ager , January 04, 2012 (view all comments by Pamela Ager)
I must confess I am an Ann Patchett fan already, and was not the least bit disappointed. Not only are her characters intriguing, but the setting of this story is also a strong presence. There are ethical issues presented to think about, but mostly I loved traveling to the Amazonian jungle without the need for shots, malaria pills or risking a closer encounter with cannibals. This is a story to stay with you long after the last page is read.

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rgurka , January 04, 2012
When I read the last page my thought was "Ann Patchett must write a sequel so that we discover what happened to.....(many of the characters, especially ???!). I loved the book for the writing style, the rich characters she built, the surprises, and the setting which was exotic, foreign and enlightening. Patchett's words created a new world in my head with real people and places so different from mine.

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Nicole Black , January 04, 2012
I devoured this book. From the feeling of the South American jungle, to the rich inner worlds of the characters themselves, I found myself endlessly fascinated not only with what this book had to said, but with how it was said. While Patchett tackles ethical questions related to pharmaceutical research and development, she also delves into the psychology of the individual and how our past affects our present.

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Jennifer Buchanan , January 04, 2012
A book to rival "Bel Canto." "State of Wonder" takes you on a journey through the Amazon where the definitions of everything we think we know are blurred, and the things about which you think you are certain can be upended in a moment. Patchett creates a world where women can have babies well into their 80s and 90s, where a tribe of cannibals are the only ones with the strength to do the right thing, and where even the dead return to life. Reading this book made me think a lot about the idea of devotion. What things in our own lives are worthy of complete devotion? For what things might we truly sacrifice ourselves and the things that we hold most dear? Very few people live their *everyday* lives in devotion to the things for which they would give their *entire* lives. I know it isn't practical, but I did wonder what the world would be like if everybody lived and worked with the single-minded certainty and devotion we see in "State of Wonder's" Dr. Swenson. On a more literary note, there is an obvious comparison to be made between "State of Wonder" and Conrad's "Heart of Darkness," but while it seems clear that "Heart of Darkness" may have been a strong influence on Patchett, the books are, at their core, about very different themes, and I think the two would be very complimentary if read side by side. Another story with obvious influences in "State of Wonder"--and which is mentioned more than once in the book itself--is the Greek myth of Orpheus bringing Eurydice back from the realm of the dead. While Patchett's story has what seems like a happier ending, there is much less certainty for Marina than there is for Orpheus, and Marina's sacrifices are at least as great as those made by Orpheus. This was a magical book which had me hooked from the first. I look forward to reading it again in the future.

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Viveca , January 04, 2012 (view all comments by Viveca )
I decided to suspend disbelief and thus fully enjoyed this fabulous tale.

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Meaghan , January 04, 2012 (view all comments by Meaghan)
Ann Patchett at her best. Gracefully written and a wonderful read.

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Aliyah , January 04, 2012
It's been a long time since a book has just taken hold and not let me go. I literally read this book in two sittings.

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Pam E , January 03, 2012 (view all comments by Pam E)
The reader is transported from the overcrowded, technically complicated United States to the Amazon jungle where new skills must be developed quickly to stay alive. The main character travels to the Amazon on a quest given her by the wife of her lab partner at the pharmaceutical company that employs them. Many cultures are represented, there are fights to the death with wild animals, amazing discoveries and the cost of learning the fate of her lab partner will haunt her for the rest of her life. Along the way the reader comes to know characters who are multi-faceted, complicated and compelling. The natural world dominates - challenging people to survive and disclosing life-giving gifts, by turns.

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linderanniscrabby , January 03, 2012
This story transported me. Could not put it down. Each character is so well drawn--I feel they are real people.

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Henry and Claire , January 03, 2012 (view all comments by Henry and Claire)
My favorite of 2011. Engaging story, interesting characters, and big ideas at stake. Bravo!

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collowash , January 03, 2012 (view all comments by collowash)
How does Patchett do it? At first I thought this book wasn't as layered or dense as "Bel Canto," but after I put it down, I couldn't stop thinking about it and all the issues it addressed. Whenever I read one of Patchett's novels, I am caught up in the spell of it for days afterward.

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catfish , January 02, 2012 (view all comments by catfish)
Couldn't put it down.

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ckraper , January 02, 2012
Patchett's language is beautiful and thought provoking

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alangstondykes , January 02, 2012
I have been really enjoying the story-telling, characters and plot development of this novel. It is also somewhat informative in a naturalistic vein as well. An all around enjoyable read.

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Martha Bullen , January 02, 2012 (view all comments by Martha Bullen)
Another outstanding novel from Ann Patchett. This was such an immersive experience, I kept forgetting I was safe at home rather than venturing into the Amazon jungle with her hapless heroine, Marina. The characters were compelling, the setting lavishly described and very real, and the plot took a couple of extremely unexpected twists. I highly recommend this to anyone who loves good stories, well told.

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Marcy Anhaltzer , January 01, 2012 (view all comments by Marcy Anhaltzer)
I loved Bel Canto and did not think Ann Patchett could create another "I can't put it down" novel of the same caliber - but she has done it again with State of Wonder. The setting is exotic and dangerous and Patchett creates a powerful image of frightening beauty. The subject matter (pharmaceutical companies) is compelling and current. Patchett provides a wild ride with twists and turns; I highly recommend going on her tour!

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Amy B in California , January 01, 2012 (view all comments by Amy B in California)
I'm a huge Ann Patchett fan and this 2011 release is a must read. This was a 'Heart of Darkness' tale with a female twist. The only disappointment was that it ended too soon.

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Pagingirl , January 01, 2012 (view all comments by Pagingirl)
This book is set deep in the Amazon jungle. The main character, Dr. Marina Singh, is a research scientist with a Minnesota pharmaceutical company that has already spent a fortune on developing a new drug. Marina is sent down to search for Dr. Swenson, (Marina's former mentor/teacher at John Hopkins). Dr. Swenson is studying a group of natives in the jungle & leads the research for the new drug. The pharmaceutical company needs answers from her; but she is nearly impossible to contact. Marina's research partner, Anders Eckman, died before he completed the same mission of getting answers on the research; leaving behind at home, his wife and children. It all becomes more involved as Marina lives among the natives and becomes involved with the researchers developing the drug. I found State of Wonder impossible to set down. It left me feeling like I myself had traveled to the jungle. A wonderful read.

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washington dc reader , January 01, 2012
excellent read--suspense, well written, good character development.

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D Terry , January 01, 2012
A delightful read, sun or shine.

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Lisa Yee , January 01, 2012
I was so fascinated by the setting in this book that I am heading to the Amazon in the spring.

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dct , January 01, 2012
Sometimes we step out of our box, sometimes we are pushed out. Regardless of how it happens, it's always a learning process. Sometimes what we learn is that the walls of our box have kept us from truly living. State of Wonder takes its characters and readers outside the box. Thanks again to Ann Patchett for a wonderful new read that shows us one version of what's on the other side of the walls.

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Ketgirl , January 01, 2012 (view all comments by Ketgirl)
Ann Patchett describes the Amazon so vividly in "State of Wonder," you'll feel like you're traipsing along beside Dr. Marina Singh as she unravels what happened to her deceased colleague in this riveting contemporary novel.

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M.L. , January 01, 2012
With soaring prose that is raw yet elegantly constructed, Patchett penetrates a world of science and adventure, human connection and personal discovery. Patchett's storytelling is unfailingly compelling and her rapport with her subject matter is stunning. The science with which she propels this exciting and suspenseful plot is so highly believable and plausible, I never for a single moment thought it could be anything but true and authentic.

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joi , January 01, 2012 (view all comments by joi)
Excellent read. I love books that take you away and teach you. Loved Bel Canto and this is better.

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Judy Hante , January 01, 2012 (view all comments by Judy Hante)
I wish that Ann Patchett could write more quickly, because her books are such treasures! I found this story intriguing and the characters and setting fascinating. It is the kind of story I expect from Ann Patchett -- it is engrossing and full of unusual but believable characters, the setting is rare but believable, and ethical questions abound. The prose, of course, is beautiful. I could feel the jungle, the river, bugs, plants, snakes -- almost smell it all. I am left not 100% certain of will happen in the lives of the characters after the ending of the book, but that's OK. I can't imagine spending one's entire life in a place like the Amazon jungle, no matter the importance of the work. Ann Patchett has once again told an entirely unique story in a strange setting with unforgettable characters. Highly recommended!!

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glass melter , January 01, 2012
If I'd read "The Help" this year, it would have been my suggestion, but I read it when it first came out, so I'm suggesting "State of Wonder". This book takes the reader from the pharmacutical lab relationships and families into the Amazon to try to find something that was even more shocking when the real "Wonder" turned up.

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Lynn Cornelius , January 01, 2012
This is a gorgeous read! This was what I most love in a book: a little bit of mystery, beautifully written prose, wacky, interesting and engaging characters, and a strong sense of place. And, I cried, which is my personal sign of a great read.

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Paula-maine , January 01, 2012 (view all comments by Paula-maine)
Ann Patchett just tells a good story! What's not to like about a story with mid-western drug reps sent to the Amazon to deal with a primitive society in which women get pregnant late into life. Add in a rogue scientist and a couple of friend/ love issues, and you have a fun adventure tale. I think my favorite book of Ann Patchett's so far.

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okiesunflower , January 01, 2012
Some books are page-turners, some are lyrical, some have surprise endings, some stretch your horizons and some are safistying. State of Wonder by Ann Patchett is all the above. I really didn't think any book by the author could top Bel Canto, but State of Wonder of a wonder of a read!!! and I highly recommend it as my selection as the 2012 Puddly Award winner!

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Rebecca Brant , January 01, 2012 (view all comments by Rebecca Brant)
Ann Patchett continues to amaze, both with the beauty of her writing and the richness and detail she brings to such a broad spectrum of characters and settings. With State of Wonder, she returns to the height of achievement she reached with Bel Canto. This time she leads us from the frigid Minnesota plains, bleak with personal loss, to a sweltering South American city and a jungle teeming with life in all its forms -- a jungle that holds more than one miracle. As always, bless her, Patchett crafts an ending that is both satisfying in itself and open to the readers' further imaginings, proving once again that if you could read only one writer for the rest of your life, you would do well to choose Ann Patchett.

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Addicted to the page , January 01, 2012 (view all comments by Addicted to the page)
Ann Patchett takes readers to the Amazon region, where a scientist working for a pharmaceutical company has gone missing after visiting a tribe of natives who utilize a plant that extends female reproductivity. Throughout the book Patchett examines the clash of cultures, scientific ethics and the social and moral implications of advanced maternal fertility, and her characters' personal decisions with her customary wit and compassion. Her vivid descriptions of life in Amazonia are stunning and unforgettable.

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lmelhindi , January 01, 2012 (view all comments by lmelhindi)
Ann Patchett is the best writer out there today. Using the conventions of the into-the jungle, away from modern civilization theme, she explores medical ethics, friendship, parenthood. All in a simple story that shows the complexity of human nature.

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Deborah Stambler , January 01, 2012
I read all of Ann Patchett's books this year. State of Wonder is an incredible book. I'm about to reread it. It's so finely written, I went through it the first read just for the plot. Now with a reread, I'll get to the deeper stuff. Read this book.

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anzalinda , January 01, 2012
An absorbing story.. a modern intellectual finds herself in another world, where the rules no longer apply. I could identify with her in so many ways. Beautifully written, engaging, with details unfolding slowly and with gusto. I recommend it wholeheartedly!

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Emma Michel , January 01, 2012
Patchett has a way of writing stories that are at once grand adventures and quietly emotional. State of Wonder achieves both of these with grace and eloquence. A spectacular read!

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Laramie-Bookworm , January 01, 2012 (view all comments by Laramie-Bookworm)
I thought Ann Patchett had reached the pinnacle with BEL CANTO but STATE OF WONDER exceeded my expectations. The characters were believable and they encountered challenge after challenge, dilemma after dilemma. Patchett did an outstanding job of describing the Amazon - sights, sounds, smells, ambiance. My book club discussed it; each of us had a different take and it was our most lively discussion of 2011.

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Stacey Donohue , January 01, 2012
I know not everyone agreed, but this was one of the best books I read this year (I read a few others, but not many): an engaging protagonist with supporting characters that intrigued, and an interesting and enticing story. Also, beautifully written, as Patchett is a fabulous writer.

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Lisa-Bug , January 01, 2012 (view all comments by Lisa-Bug)
Vivid, compelling characters. Wildly imaginative scenario. Gripping plot. Anne Patchett dreams up a whole world for the reader to get lost in.

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itsjulia , January 01, 2012
On this new years day I am hoping 2012 will bring the same gentle,yet thrilling passage as the Amazon provided in this novel. If only I could keep the tone of her words in my daily life!

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Anne in Eugene , January 01, 2012 (view all comments by Anne in Eugene)
This was a page turner. I read it straight through in 3 or 4 days. I then reread some passages for a book club meeting and was equally thrilled the second time through. Patchett's attention to detail is what makes these scenes really come alive. Definitely one of the best books I read in 2011.

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Margaret McNally , January 01, 2012 (view all comments by Margaret McNally)
State of Wonder is another triumph for Ann Patchett.

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carolmt , January 01, 2012
Fabulous! A bit of everything - ethics, adventure, foreign setting

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bkwrm , November 05, 2011 (view all comments by bkwrm)
This book is beautifully written. It manages to combine love, mystery, joy, and hardship. It takes the reader on a voyage to the Amazon rainforest for a glimpse of native tribes. It brings up burning questions about motives of businessmen and scientists in the world of drug developement. It leaves readers questioning whether money is spent developing drugs that we need in the world, or just drugs that wealthy people think they want.

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psyers , September 13, 2011
I've just finished reading Ann Patchett's novel State of Wonder. Dogs, cats, kids... all were left largely unfed while I read this truly extraordinary book.Patchett's characters were unforgettable and her descriptions of the Amazonian jungle kept me itching and scratching and marveling throughout the book. Multi-layered themes were interwoven with consumate skill. I'll be thinking about this one for a long time to come. I'd mostly despaired over most modern fiction, but thank goodness, now I've discovered Ann Patchett. This is a must-read.

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Rachelle Shanrock , September 04, 2011 (view all comments by Rachelle Shanrock)
i have to admit that i'm not yet halfway through this book so far. however, i'm just absolutely loving it. i'm the type of reader that usually kind of skims (especially through long descriptive paragraphs) but ann patchett's writing is so good, so amazing, so beautiful, that i'm finding myself reading very slowly, capturing every single word. this book transports me straight to brazil as soon as i pick it up, and it effortlessly involves me in the story so well that when i have to set the book down for a moment i have difficulty putting it out of my mind and returning to real life. "bel canto" by ann patchett is my favorite book (has been for at least 5 years since i read it first) but i think this new novel will give "bel canto" a run for its money! thank you, ann patchett!!!

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Marian Spector , September 01, 2011
This is a good, moody book with lot's of turns and twists. What I loved is how the book blended our logical head with our illogical head. The writer successfully pulls the reader down a journey with many routes. I read it and now I am rereading it. Smarts, cutting humor and raw emotion. I haven't ever read this author and am now a convert. She weaves a good story. A perfect weekend read by the fire or tucked into a beach chair ignoring the lady throwing bread up to the seagulls.

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Amy Mai , September 01, 2011 (view all comments by Amy Mai)
I have been a fan of Ann Patchett's books, and this is a new favorite. I love it!

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Rose Reader , September 01, 2011
If I could use one word to describe Ann Patchett's latest novel, "State of Wonder", it would be WOW. I am completely in awe of this woman's ability to dream up an incredible story line, multi-layered and fascinating characters, and page turning plot development - all encapsulated in writing that is so good, it is making it difficult to pick up another book. When that inevitable, dreaded last page came, I was depressed, and immediately craved an epilogue of events for the characters I had become so involved with. If you are looking for a story you can dive into, don't deliberate, just read this book. You won't regret anything but coming to the end of it!

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rodamu , September 01, 2011 (view all comments by rodamu)
Patchett's latest book is a complex of character studies, adventure, culture clashes and ethics that holds the readers interest in a vice-like grip. Competing very closely for best book is "Turn of Mind" by LaPlante. An absorbing novel of loss of memory mixed with a murder mystery.

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Alisha C , August 22, 2011 (view all comments by Alisha C)
State of Wonder is perfectly paced with a cast of very likable and well thought out characters. The plot of the story isn’t merely a musing on modern drug creations and the west’s effects on tribal cultures, but also a multi-layered exploration in the power of environment, philosophy, ethics, with a small smattering of mystery to keep you only wanting more. The novel delves into an exploration of nature versus nurture, where in the end, your own views may be influenced. The title has been perfectly defined, as the novel suspends you and its characters in a state of wonder. Intricate descriptions of the Amazon jungle and all of its characteristics: vegetation, lifestyle, inhabitants, sounds and smells. State of Wonder is an adventure worth undertaking. (excerpt from review posted at www.luxuryreading.com)

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LyndaT , August 18, 2011 (view all comments by LyndaT)
"State of Wonder" by Ann Patchett is easily going to land in my top 10 list (and maybe my top FIVE list) of my best books of 2011. Simply put, I can't recommend it enough. I doubt that I'll ever make it to Brazil, and even if I did, I probably wouldn't end up in the thickest, most remote sections of the jungle there. And now I know that I'll never have to, because the Patchett absolutely takes you there. Marina, a medical researcher for a drug company in Minnesota (home state shout-out, yeah!) gets word from her boss that her coworker and friend Anders has died in the jungle while there to check on a mysterious researcher working there for the company. She is sent there to follow his trail, both by the company, which wants to know how the doctor's research is coming along, and by Anders's wife, who wants to know what happened. The story and settings competed for my interest, and yet melded so well that one didn't distract from the other. Her descriptions of winter in Minnesota had me shivering (in August!), and during the time in the jungle, the creatures there had me jumping at each whine of a mosquito in my ear. Yes, there are some improbable details in this book, but being that escape from the ordinary and the ability to see a place that I'll never visit are among the main reasons that I read, it didn't really bother me. This book will hold your interest like an anaconda -- just TRY to put it down mid-read, you'll see.

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Denise Barnett , July 19, 2011 (view all comments by Denise Barnett)
This is a wonderful, interesting and page-turner of a story!! I fell in love with the characters and the intrigue of the research being done in the jungle. Just when I thought I had the story figured out, it changed! Highly recommend!!

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FBB , June 28, 2011 (view all comments by FBB)
I have enjoyed Patchett's previous work, but this novel is a departure and a good one. A page-turner, it takes us on a journey with Marina Singh from America to Brazil to the Amazon, all the while the reader wonders what will go wrong. And much does, but in the end Singh has learned about her own heart despite (perhaps because of?) her sojourn. Really, just about the best novel I have read in a long time. READ IT! You won't be disappointed.

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OneMansView , April 11, 2011 (view all comments by OneMansView)
The Amazon: a formidable place It is an enviable talent, best realized previously in BEL CANTO, of the author to vividly and dramatically construct special places and situations, dictated by unusual circumstances that have suddenly undercut comfortably led lives, calling upon deep-seated resourcefulness and reserves for basic survival. Forty-two-year-old Dr. Marina Singh, a former Ob-Gyn resident, is stunned by the news that her long-time pharmacological research partner Anders Eckman has died in the Amazonian jungles from an incurable fever only a few months after being sent by their employer to determine the progress being made on a new fertility drug by the reclusive Dr. Annick Swenson; it is work that has to take place deep in the jungle, nonetheless, the company wants to see practical evidence of a future return on its investment. Marina, from the time her boss and clandestine lover Mr. Fox and Ander’s devastated widow Karen persuade her to travel to the Amazon, has no point of reference to anticipate the profound life-changes that she will face over the next several months. Even before departure, screaming nightmares begin as a result of taking medicines to protect against tropical diseases, not to mention the dread of having to encounter the cantankerous Dr. Swenson, who was the attending physician when Marina committed an egregious mistake as a resident some fifteen years prior, prompting her to change careers. The author slowly and deftly increases the tension level upon Marina’s arrival in Manaus, the last outpost of civilization on the Amazon: her luggage is lost; she is constantly being soaked and muddied by the unpredictable torrential rains; she is dependent on a young bohemian couple, the Bovender’s, who live in Dr. Swenson’s apartment in her absence, but who are particularly non-revelatory; and she too develops a severe fever. When the brusque Dr. Swenson unexpectedly appears at an Manaus opera house performance, which the Bovender’s and Marina are attending, it appears to be only to add to Marina’s misery by disingenuously forcing her to walk to a restaurant in inappropriate shoes causing the formation of painful blisters and to dissuade Marina from accompanying her on her return to the jungle. It is only by drawing upon her last ounce of resolve and her promise to bring closure to Ander’s death that Marina climbs aboard the pontoon boat piloted by Easter, a deaf Indian boy more or less adopted by Dr. Swenson, early the next morning. And so begins an unimaginable journey. A state of wonder can only partially capture the observations and experiences of Marina in the heart of the Amazon. The Amazonian jungle is a fearful place: the vegetation alone threatens to swallow all, not to mention that it harbors a wide variety of hurtful, if not deadly, elements - plants, animals, and other tribes - learned about only through generationally imparted knowledge. The Indian tribe, the Lakashi, that are part of the fertility study, is both primitive and highly communal, with an unnerving proclivity to touch, slap, and groom each other, including Marina. One behavior change necessary in an environment of deprivation, is that self-pitying demons and fears have to be discarded. Marina becomes the camp de-facto surgeon, forced to innovate beyond anything taught in medical school, and slowly learns to appreciate the thinking, concerns, and work of Dr. Swenson, while gaining her respect. While Marina must weigh the findings of Dr. Swenson versus the demands of her employer, she remains steadfast in her mission to learn about Anders. Easter apparently had a close relationship with him, keeping any number of important items, including unmailed letters, which only adds to her desire to find closure for Anders. The book is not without its implausible, perhaps magical, moments. Yet it is hard to nitpick a different reality ��" one that operates according to its own imperative, once initiated by the author. As in BEL CANTO, a special, symbiotic community is at work, the reality of which would escape anyone not embedded within it. One scarcely concealed reality is the bottom-line mentality of Vogel, the pharmaceutical company, including Mr. Fox. While we, the readers, may want to recognize the special nature and uniqueness of such a community, individuals and communities in the eyes of many profit-seeking companies are means to ends and are expendable.

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Product Details

ISBN:
9780062049803
Binding:
Hardcover
Publication date:
06/07/2011
Publisher:
HARPER
Pages:
368
Height:
1.22IN
Width:
6.38IN
Thickness:
1.25
Number of Units:
1
Copyright Year:
2011
UPC Code:
4294967295
Author:
Ann Patchett
Media Run Time:
B
Subject:
General Fiction

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