Black Dog Summer
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
Narrator Jilly Bond immediately draws the listener into this story, which is told by the ghost of a woman named Sally. Her tone is conversational, warm, and rambling as she attempts to make sense of her death--and why she's trapped on earth, not heading towards the white light. Bond's narration is breathy and intriguing. Sally says she has no choice but to pursue the story of why she remains among the living. Neither does the listener, under the spell of Jilly Bond's expert style. Bond juggles cadence, pitch, and pace to build the suspense at the heart of this story. She's an excellent choice to voice the questions that drive the plot forward: Who killed Sally? And is her daughter safe? This is an excellent example of how audio can make for riveting fiction. M.R. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2015, Portland, Maine
December 8, 2014
Sherry’s debut is an evocative coming-of-age story in the vein of The Lovely Bones set in modern-day South Africa. Violence erupts on an ordinary morning at a remote communal farm, killing narrator Sally (known since childhood as Monkey for her “long, too skinny fingers”). Three days of “not being Sally anymore,” yet “still here,” she begins to understand that the din she hears as she navigates high above ground are “Africa’s stories being told”; like hers, many are “full of violence and blood and fury.” Through her 11-year-old niece, Bryony, Sally finds a way to follow her traumatized teenage daughter, Gigi, who fails to adjust to her new circumstances in Johannesburg with a family she hardly knows. Sally follows as her estranged sister, Adele, and husband, Liam, each cope with their grief and regret, and with the difficulty of incorporating Gigi into their tense home life. As the family aches, Bryony meets her intriguing neighbor Lesedi, a sangoma (healer) who senses that Bryony is in danger. The story is a familiar portrait of a family with secrets and the unavoidable loss of innocence that accompanies tragedy. Sherry’s sense of pacing—moving back and forth from the present to Sally’s childhood and time on the farm—and her keen ear for dialogue make for a good read.
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