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Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens

Where the Crawdads Sing

by Delia Owens
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  • First Published:
  • Aug 14, 2018, 384 pages
  • Paperback:
  • Mar 2021, 400 pages
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Reviews

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There are currently 24 reader reviews for Where the Crawdads Sing
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Power Reviewer
Sandi W.

The author gives you the visual, the characters give you the familiarity
Seldom does a book leave you with a warm and completed feeling. Especially one revealing a murderer in its closing paragraphs. But this is the book that managed to do just that.

Delia Owens introduces you to a wonderful list of characters. Then she sends them on their way to circle around one little waif of a girl, as she tries to circumvent isolation and loneliness. Kya, known to others as the Marsh Girl, lives a lonely life in an old marsh cabin, left on her own from an early age, trying to understand and accept her solitary existence.

Long after I have put this book down I will be thinking of the characters and setting of this book. Both were exquisitely written. Within just a few pages you are drawn into this world. You are set down in a marshland, taken back, where things were, as they always have been. Space, time and distance melt away and you are there, silently moving alongside the characters, bringing them to life. Smelling the brackish water, hearing the drone of insects, watching the birds fly. The author gives you the visual, the characters give you the familiarity.

This is a book that will take your breath away. Not one to be missed.
Cyndi H

She nails a lot of her descriptions
When I first started reading this coastal based book, I was immediately drawn in by the story, but more so, her detailed, and maritime descriptions. Great writing! Excellent depiction of what NC marshes are like.
Tonyia R.

Mystery in the Southeast swamps
Based on this premise - one part mystery, one part legal drama, one part coming of age story, and one part love story - I didn't think coming of age was realistic...the author focused on too much for my taste on entertaining.
Yana Gifford

A quiet place
Wonderful book. Enjoyed reading it through and through. It wonderfully described scenery and nature, the relationship between people and nature. Having said this, the plot at times was a bit unrealistic. I wish it was more said about the murder too.
Monica T

Average
The book is chock full of cliches, and the reader is asked numerous times to suspend reality as the story unfolds.

Also, for those familiar with the area, it makes zero sense when the author tries to weave in Asheville numerous times in the story line. She writes that characters shop there while in our modern interstate society that would be well over a six hour drive. In the 40s and 50s, it would be quite a bit more. Just didn’t make sense…except the author likes Asheville and wanted to incorporate it no matter what.

The author’s overuse of similes was tiring and pulled me away from her writing. When figurative language is doing all the work, writing suffers.
Carolyn

Where the crawdads sing
Sorry to say, I also was disappointed in this book to some extent. Not at all what I thought it would be. YES! Kya DOES blame her family & others in the town for her plight, a little too much. How could a mother abandon her young child--too unbelievable. But yes, I was surprised by the ending but wondered how she could have pulled that off.
Antigone

Chick Lit
I started reading this book with high expectations, based on the many glowing reviews. As I read, I grew more and more disappointed. Too much like chick lit. Too predictable. Characters lack complexity, lack depth, and seemed insipid to me. Perhaps I am being overly harsh, as I had recently finished several Elizabeth Berg novels (including Truluv), as well as Olive, Again, and some Anne Tyler and Annie Proulx. All these writers and novels, including Crawdads, feature unique female protagonists, but Aya, the marsh girl of Crawdads, is nowhere near the nourishing literary meal and depth of character of Olive and her ilk. By comparison, Crawdads seems like chick lit.
Duncan

Where The Crawdads Sing
You might find this a good read if you can suspend reality as you read it. Then you will be astounded as the child learns to read in one session, leading her to become a brilliant and celebrated writer-illustrator.
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