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Songcatcher A Novel
 
 

Songcatcher A Novel [Hardcover]

Sharyn Mccrumb
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (34 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

Skipping back and forth in time from the 18th to the late 20th century, and drawing on her own family history, McCrumb tells two stories in her appealing new novel, one heading toward, the other returning to, the Appalachians. In the present-day sections, 83-year-old John Walker is slowly dying in the eastern Tennessee town where he has lived most of his life, while his estranged daughter, Linda Walker better known as the country singer Lark McCourry is trying to make it home before he dies. She is also trying to recollect an old song she heard once at a family gathering, a song she hopes will round out her forthcoming album. But heading home, Lark is downed in the mountains in a small plane and trapped inside it. Meanwhile, Malcolm McCourry, one of Lark's maternal ancestors, narrates the story of his life, from the day in 1751 when English seamen kidnapped him at the age of nine from the Scottish isle Islay to the close of his life in the mountains of western North Carolina. Always he carries with him a song he learned aboard ship, which is then passed down to his descendants, each one remembering it at a crucial moment. McCrumb, an award-winning crime and mystery writer, has mixed historic and contemporary plots with success in the past (notably in She Walks These Hills and other novels in her Ballad series; some characters from the Ballad series reappear here), and she does so again, letting the past inform the present and generating a good deal of suspense in a novel that is not properly a mystery. Readers may come to feel that Lark McCourry, unlike the tune-miners looking to stake a copyright claim to every mountain song they hear, is the real songcatcher, the rightful inheritor of her family's music.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

The statement on McCrumb's web site (www.sharynmccrumb.com) that her new book "will be Roots with a tune" is not quite accurate. While it is about many generations of a Southern family and a song that is passed down from one to the next, it is in no other way comparable to a masterpiece like Alex Haley's Roots. In alternating chapters, we read of the kidnapped Scottish boy who brings the song to America and his adventures on the frontier, countered with the travails of his modern-day folk singer descendant, whose plane crashes on her way back to her Appalachian home to track down the song. Interspersed with these are distantly relevant story lines involving a hiker trapped in the mountains and the ghost of another dead folk singer who visits with the living demanding sole proprietary rights to the song. McCrumb (The PMS Outlaws; The Ballad of Frankie Silver) based the story on her own family's history, but the sections that take place in contemporary times are more enjoyable than the interruptions from the past. Still, given McCrumb's popularity, most public libraries should consider.
- Lisa Bier, Mashantucket Pequot Research Lib., CT
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Customer Reviews

34 Reviews
5 star:
 (17)
4 star:
 (12)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (34 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Haunting, lyrical, Jun 21 2004
This review is from: Songcatcher (Paperback)
From the first page of this book Sharyn McCrumb gets her hooks into the reader and doesn't let you go.

There are many reasons why I shouldn't have liked this book, and yet I did. Normally I won't read a book that has more than two or three viewpoint characters. This book had more than a dozen narrators, but such is McCrumb's talent that each character has a unique voice and point of view so you aren't jarred by the transitions.

There is no mystery in here per se, though the book is shelved in the mystery section. And the action switches between past and present, tracing one family through the generations while events in the present unfold over the course of a few days.

The real star of this book is the Appalachin setting, which McCrumb writes about lovingly but without sentimentality. Every time I read one of her books I feel as if I had spent that time in her beloved mountains, meeting some of the wonderful and quirky characters who fill her stories.

A great read. It's a treat to watch how McCrumb continues to grow as a writer in each of her books.

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2.0 out of 5 stars Not her best..., Mar 28 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Songcatcher (Paperback)
I've read all of Sharyn McCrumb's Appalachian novels and eagerly looked forward to reading this one. I did finish it, but it seemed far more chore than pleasure. We spent so much time bouncing around between characters in different times and places that I never really developed much interest in any of them. I hoped I would become hooked right until the last page and was almost relieved when I finally finished. If you've never read Sharon McCrumb, try her earlier novels, particularly "She Walks These Hills," and "The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter."
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5.0 out of 5 stars An Original Story, Nov 6 2003
By 
V. L. Wilson "V. L. Wilson" (Millville, New Jersey United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Songcatcher (Paperback)
This book was given to me by my sister. The Appalachian mountains have always fascinated me. My husband was born in West Virginia. My son-in-law is from Tennessee. I loved this book - a truly original story spanning three centuries of family history. The editorial review is excellent.

I consider this book a "keeper". It is so unique - the gifted author has written a satisfying tale. I had to read the entire book straight thru - it captivated me, informed me, and made me eager for more. It is easy to read, very spellbinding, and I recommend it to all who like reading fiction that seems to be too real to be fiction.

Books by James Michener, such as Centennial, give me this same feeling. Time spent reading both these authors is well spent.

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