Cover Image: Miracle Creek

Miracle Creek

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Member Reviews

Basically: a thriller/drama (driller?) taking place in and out of the courtroom and told by the multiple people who were involved in a crime. Side themes: alternative medicine and methods to treat autism, Asian culture and the difficulties of being an immigrant family, and lots of regular day-to-day angst.

Angie Kim, in her debut, weaves an excellent whodunit - once you think you've uncovered the truth, another clue or conversation comes up that throws your theory in the trash. The novel was fast-paced and I enjoyed every character's story. This is one of the best books I've read this year and I'm looking forward to reading more from Kim.

Thank you FSG and Netgalley for the ARC.

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This was an incredible book that I enjoyed much more then I would have ever predicted! Miracle Creek tells the story of a woman on trial charged with murder as the result of a fire in a hyperbaric chamber (a pressurized oxygen chamber!). The fired killed two people and injured others. It is however so much more than that! With the trial as a background, the author develops a rich and textured story that examines the love and sacrifice that comes with family. This examination is as nuanced and complex as love and family really are. The book flawlessly weaves together two seemingly unrelated struggles, that of an immigrant family struggling for survival in a new country and the struggle of families with autistic children. What we find however is that these struggles are not unrelated at all. These struggles are born from each families single-minded determination that their children will have a fulfilling life and reach their maximum potential. Nothing is simple in this novel, and for that reason, it is an incredible journey. Miracle Creek is absolutely a book worth reading and one that will stay with you long after you have read the last page. I thoroughly recommend it! I was honored to receive a free copy of this book by NetGalley and the Publisher, Farrar, Straus, and Giroux in exchange for an honest review.

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This one sucked me right in..... and I couldn't wait to pick it up each time.
Labelled a courtroom drama,very little happens in the courtroom,just a few subtle actions that change the way the story works.
What it mainly has,is a group of people that are lying,to cover up something.... non of them aware that the other is lying.
At each new chapter it felt like someone else had set the fire that killed two people.... and then with another revaluation,it felt it MUST gave been someone else.

It also did a good job of making the mother's seem real... their daily grind of children with varying special needs,the exhaustion of it all.

All round a book I'll be recommending for a while.

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This was absolutely gripping and fantastically written!
It kept me on edge and guessing until the end. I won't give too much away as I don't want to spoil anything, but if you love a good family-courtroom-thriller-drama then please put it on to your TBR right now! I'd recommend going in blind and savouring this story.
Buzz words: courtroom drama, autism and treatments, family, relationships, thriller
I'm going to pick up anything else Angie Kim is going to come up with.

Thank you so much FSG books @fsgbooks and Netgalley for providing me with an eARC.

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love this book, characters were well developed. The plot had many twist and turns. Great read., cannot wait for the next book..

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Angie Kim has written a chilling thriller.A courtroom drama a horrible tragedy involving all those involved in this trial .Autisim searching for cures desperate parents.We are given a glimpse of the lives of these families.This is so tense emotional so well written an author to watch.Highly recommend was drawn in couldn’t put down.#netgalley #Miracle Creek #Fsg

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This is an extraordinary novel. I read it in one swoop, unable to put it down. Yes, it's a courtroom drama, but to call it that is to diminish the scope and beauty of this story. I can't think of the last time I read a novel written with such profound empathy - for the mothers of autistic children, for immigrant parents who sacrifice so much for their children and for the children who suffer so much from that very act of love, for the complications of marriage and how we lie to protect those we love (and sometimes ourselves) and tell the truth knowing it will bring pain. Angie Kim has created characters so real and so complicated, they will break your heart. Can't recommend this one highly enough!

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"My husband asked me to lie. Not a big lie. He probably didn’t even consider it a lie, and neither did I, at first . . .

In rural Virginia, Young and Pak Yoo run an experimental medical treatment device known as the Miracle Submarine—a pressurized oxygen chamber that patients enter for therapeutic “dives” with the hopes of curing issues like autism or infertility. But when the Miracle Submarine mysteriously explodes, killing two people, a dramatic murder trial upends the Yoos’ small community."

Once I found out this was a book similar to a Jodi Picoult novel I just had to read it... I was not disappointed! It was such a compelling and powerful read, I just couldn't put it down. It's a courtroom drama thriller that really pulls on your emotions. Have a box of Kleenex by you when you read this one!

Thanks to #Netagalley for this ARC of #MiracleCreek by by Angie Kim
Pub Date: 16 Apr 2019

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At Miracle Creek, families with sick loved ones come searching for a miracle. But when the miracle medical treatment turns tragic after an explosion, families are left wondering how this could have happened.

From beginning to end, Miracle Creek keeps you guessing. Each time you think the mystery is solved, a new detail emerges that has you second-guessing once more. While this may sound like a frustrating journey, Angie Kim manages to unravel this mystery with such detail and care that it feels completely natural. I did not want to put the book down. I found myself surprised by the final reveal, but still feeling like it made total sense. The eventual ending left me completely satisfied, which is a rare occurrence. My only criticism would be that sometimes the details were overwhelming.

This was clearly well-researched and well-planned. Beyond the overall mystery, I appreciated the novel's attention to other issues including familial relationships, the joys and struggles of parents, and mental illness. This definitely covers a variety of topics but never feels like it's shoving ideas at you. I am looking forward to future novels from this author.

Thanks FSG & NetGalley for the ARC!

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Quick Summary: A couple owns & runs a hyperbaric chamber for people with health issues & when it explodes, we see the truth come out throughout the story of the trial.

This was quite the mystery to find out who created this explosion, which resulted in deaths & many people harmed - mentally and physically.

The courtroom action was the most interesting part to me in the story. Other times, the story got really long & complicated with all the characters & seemed to drag on in areas.

There's also an interesting view on the family who runs the HBOT as we see culture come into play & just the dynamics of a couple with a teenager daughter & the relationships they have.

In the end, I had to keep on reading to find out the truth on what happened because just when you think one person is the cause, you dig a little deeper into the mystery.

Read if you enjoy a mystery - or if you are intrigued by hyperbaric therapy, or if you are involved in the autistic therapies or know anyone with dealing with autism.

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Is there an option for 10/5 stars?

Two victims killed in a fire. Suspect is one of the victim's mother whose child has autism.

I love courtroom drama. This one was brilliant! I hung on to every word. Pondered on every argument and tried hard reading between the lines. The case and story were well built and plotted, with the right amount of tension and suspense.

Every character was perfectly developed. They're all so relatable - their anger, heartaches, shame, guilt, frustrations, all of them, so flawed, so human.

So who was it who had the heart to commit such an unforgivable, heinous crime??? I thought I knew all along what exactly happened, only to realize, dang, I was wrong!

I was so committed in solving the case I tried locking myself away from everything and everyone. This book was that good.

Besides the page-turning plot, relevant issues like challenges of being an immigrant and a parent of special needs children, discrimination, racism were also brought to focus, and written unbiasedly!

This is definitely going to be one of my top reads of the year. Will be keeping an eye out for more of Angie Kim's works! I can't believe this is her debut!

Thank you Netgalley and Farrar, Straus and Giroux for a free eARC of this book in exchange for an honest review! All opinions are my own.

A full review will be posted on my blog and Goodreads, and shared on Twitter and Litsy closer to publication day.

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Angie Kim......put her on your author radar. This book is meticulously written with well developed characters and a detailed and interesting plot, that is filled with twists and turns. Angie Kim’s attention to detail is impressive. The reader has a lot to absorb but is never lost. She layers and builds without confusion. As you read this novel, you are forced to contemplate who, what, when? My reviews reflect my opinion of the read and do not describe details of the book. Those can be obtained by reading a synopsis on the inside cover. I enjoyed this book and I thank Netgalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read and review this ARC.

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An exceptional book. It's thrillingly plot-driven, so suspenseful, expertly crafted to keep pulling you forward -- you won't be able to turn the pages fast enough. And at the same time it's so intelligent and compassionate about every character. No one in this story is simply good or bad. Everyone is a mix of both. The story makes compelling moral arguments about the random assignment of guilt, the injustice of the justice system, the desperate shame and love of parenthood, and the responsibilities members of a community have to each other. I'm blown away by Angie Kim's talent and vision. Wow.

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'Did he think so much had already happened that nothing more could? But life doesn’t work like that. Tragedies don’t inoculate you against further tragedies, and misfortune doesn’t get sprinkled out in fair proportions; bad things get hurled at you in clumps and batches, unmanageable and messy. How could he not know that, after everything we’d been through?'

This is a wonderfully written courtroom drama that not only tugged my emotional strings but had its twist at the end. Miracle Creek, Virginia, Young and Pak Yoo run an experimental medical treatment device known as the Miracle Submarine (pressurized oxygen chamber) that gives new hope to patients with varied maladies. All seems to be going swimmingly, until an explosion kills two patients within the chamber during a power outage. Others are also left with serious injuries. A trial asks, who had a reason to murder the victims because one thing is becoming more certain, it wasn’t an accident.

Young and Pak Yoo are Korean immigrants, striving for success in America. Pak had lived without his family at first, knows all about sacrificie and struggle. Surely he had more than his fair share of hardship, yet he should have known better than, on that fateful day, to ask “What could go wrong?” as if like a command, because to the universe, it’s a challenge. On opening day with all the fresh faces of hope never could those patients, and mothers have fathomed what tragedy awaited them all. With a daughter of their own about to head to off college, are they capable of committing murders for insurance money? Especially when Pak himself and their daughter Mary were also injured? Then again, why weren’t the Yoo’s present when everything went wrong? Why did they leave the patients unattended? It seems everyone has secrets, the distance between Mary and Young has been widening for a long time, like Pak says ‘you always think the worst of her’ but could she be right? Since the accident, she is much worse, but there were things before, like her daughter ignoring her, being too good to help with cooking, cleaning. This better American life didn’t include Mary stooping to that, oh no, that was all on Young’s shoulders. Now her daughter is healing, but something inside of her is tormented.

The trial seems to be focused on Elizabeth ( the defendant) mother of Henry, now deceased, with a list of disorders from Autism Spectrum to OCD. The most ‘manageable’ child of all the patients with disabilities yet the most overwhelmed, resentful, exasperated mother who everyone could see was cracking. It is true, she sometimes hurt him, it is also true she pretended to be sick and went to ‘have a smoke’ instead when the explosion happened. Is it wrong that Young feels relief that Elizabeth is the focus of the people’s fury, that she is absorbing all of the blame? What about Pak? Yes, he made a mistake, but whether he was there or not, it still would have happened, surely he can’t be blamed? Right? He can’t see everything he and his wife worked so hard for as immigrants, all to give Mary opportunity in America disappear! They need that insurance money desperately, or they won’t survive. Matt is called to witness, not so surprising as he understands better than anyone about hyperbarics, holding an M.D. as he does and he was present, after all, a patient himself, taking part in the dives to help with his infertility. He can explain how the ‘submarine’ works, to the court, the jury. He has his own deceptions to hide from his wife Janine, riveted by his answers on the stand. All of this is stirring up weeks he would rather forget, but why?

More than anything, this story is a chain of events, if you remove one action, could the outcome have been different? Is there really just one person to pin everything on or are so many others accountable? There are many roads to guilt, and it seems here every character is on one. Is the truth always the only choice? Are lies as ruinous as facing up to one’s sins? There is a lot to think about here and depending on who you ask about just such a scenario, you’ll get a different answer. Elizabeth’s situation, and Henry’s, was a very difficult read for me. I’m still gutted! This was a very touchingn novel and I look forward to Angie Kim’s next! Not all courtroom dramas can hold my attention, but Miracle Creek balanced what lead up to the trial and the aftermath perfectly.

Publication Date: April 16, 2019

Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Sarah Crichton Books

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I loved this book. I went to bed extra early so I could read it. I didn't know what to expect and thought initially it might just be a who dunnit with some courtroom shenanigans thrown in but it was so much more and extremely well written.
It is about a Korean couple who have come to the US to give their daughter a better education and life. However, things haven't gone as planned. The husband, Pak is a qualified hyperbaric chamber technician and has secured backing from some Korean ex pat friends to open a hyperbaric treatment barn to offer pure oxygen therapy off label for a number of conditions. The business is doing well even though the family live in a shack but one evening on the last "dive" the barn catches fire and two clients, Henry an 8 year old boy with autism and another adult who was with her child get burnt to death. A doctor client who is taking the treatment for low sperm count under duress for his wife's sake has his hand badly burnt. Suspicion for arson falls on Henry's mother as there is easy, circumstantial evidence pointing to her wishing her child was dead added tot he fact that at the last moment she didn't accompany Henry for his session.

The narrative follows the court room proceedings with two lawyers both more interested in showing off their skills than the pursuit of the truth or justice and delves into the background stories of Pak's family, the doctor, the accused and a few of the other clients. It is a real page turner and very poignant, dealing with the isolation of immigration, the tearing apart of family ties, the grind and mixed emotions of caring for a learning disabled child, belonging and expulsion, sexual assault and physical abuse to name a few themes. You also find out who dunnit. Really good. One of the best new novels I've read this year.

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You can find this review, and all my others over at www.readbookrepeat.wordpress.com

Wow, I'm actually struggling to find the right words to describe this story.
When Miracle Creek starts, we are thrown straight into a court case for an event that happened a year ago at the barn owned by the Yoo family. They operate Miracle Submarine, a hyberbaric oxygenation chamber which is said to help cure illness and ailments. On Tuesday, August 26, 2008, a fire caught at the back on the barn where the chamber was housed, igniting the oxygen tanks and causing an explosion which killed two people, Kitt, a mother of five and Henry, an 8 year old boy. What follows is the preceding of the court case and the damnation of Henry's mother, Elizabeth, who has been accused of child abuse, and of being responsible for setting the blaze which ultimately killed her son. But is she actually guilty of murder?

Miracle Creek is a court room drama, but it's also SO much more than that. It deals with a lot of different things, it looks at the immigration of the Yoo family from Seoul, Korea; we see the struggles that a non-English speaking person faces when forced to assimilate into an primarily English speaking country. The difficulties that they face every day, doing simple things. From Young's working from 6am to Midnight everyday when they first get there to ensure that her and her daughter have a place to live - to Mary's trouble with trying to fit in at school, and deal with the racial slurs that are thrown her way, as well as trying to adjust to her 'English' name - Mary. We get an idea of the struggles that a parent of a special-needs child goes through, the feelings and emotions that must pepper them every day of their lives. The guilt they deal with when they allow themselves a split second of simply being human and wishing that their child was different, then punishing themselves because they should be grateful for what they have. The heartache at seeing someone else's child succeed and realise that their child will never do that, will never have a normal life that should be afforded to everyone. The exhaustion and the drive to do anything if it will help their child get just a little bit better than what they currently are. It deals with infertility and the strain that it can put on a young newly married couple, as well as inter-racial marriage and the stigma that still can surround it to this day. You see? It is so much more than a court room drama where we are left salivating and chomping at the bit just to find out WHO DUN IT!?

I found the story incredibly intriguing. It dealt with lies, so many lies, many that were so innocent, in any normal circumstance, it wouldn't have affected anything at all, but when paired with the devastating outcome in this story, it shows how much the smallest thing can make a difference.

I loved the way the characters were written, I love that the author didn't sugar coat anything she addressed in this story. You felt the heartache, exhaustion, fear, guilt and pain that these characters went through. I had absolutely no idea whether Elizabeth was innocent or guilty, and if she wasn't innocent, I had no idea who the real culprit could have been. I had inklings, and funnily enough my very first one that I had near the start of the book actually turned out to be correct. This story also looks at the human condition, how people make mistakes, how painful it sometimes is to just be human. Even now, I'm sitting here with the story continually running through my head. It really stays with you. Reading about everyone's actions leading up to and on the day of the explosion was fantastic, it really cemented the seed of doubt that crept in, and I love that, I powered through the story as fast as I could because I just needed to know what really happened on that mournful Tuesday, the 26th of August in 2008.

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MIRACLE CREEK is a superbly written courtroom drama that examines Life's Big Questions with empathy and leaves you reeling. Trust me, this is one you don't want to miss—it's going to be huge! Many thanks to the FSG Books for the digital ARC!

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My first time reading this author and I was completely blown away by her prose and vivid atmospheric ability to capture a place and a feeling.

A new virus is spreading in a small Southern California college town. The victims fall into a slumber they can not awake from. While the rest of the country looks on with either horror or denial, the residents of Santa Lora are forced into a quarantine. The panic, mayhem and terror slowly builds suffocating the reader. And while the virus spreads, ideas are introduced about reality, dreams, parallel lives and defining what it means to be alive.

This was an eloquent and elegant mind f*ck!
Thank you to NetGalley and Random House for providing me with an ARC.

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This book is well-written and intricately weaves together the stories of many characters in a court room whodunnit novel. The part that really impacted me was the honesty of Elizabeth's character and the hardships she faces with Henry's needs. I don't know if the author also has a special-needs child or just did some great research, but the writing was very compelling and brought me to tears. In the end I see this book as a tragedy, which I guess is why I had a hard time wanting to read it sometimes. It was definitely a powerful read from a strong literary voice.

Thank you to the author, publisher, and NetGalley for an advance copy in exchange for an honest review.

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4.5 stars! I received an ARC of this book.

Miracle Creek quickly drew me in and kept me reading. This murder mystery is set largely in the courtroom during the murder trial with glimpses into the lives of those involved. Just when you think you've figure out "who dun it" another twist unfolds. This book was well written and kept me interested all the way through to the last page.

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