Where The Crawdads Sing Summary

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Where The Crawdads Sing Summary 7,7/10 121 votes

Where the Crawdads Sing Overview Where the Crawdads Sing is a novel by Delia Owens. The narrative spans from 1952 to 1970 and follows the life of Catherine “Kya” Clark, who has lived alone in a North Carolina swamp since childhood.

  1. Where The Crawdads Sing Discussion Questions
  1. A girl fighting against the world. A murder mystery left in the dark. A bond as fleeting as the crawdads Summary and Analysis of Where the Crawdads Sing: A Novel by Delia Owens Book Nerd offers an in depth summary of “Where the Crawdads Sing.” Learn about this mystery suspense novel in these sections: Chapter-by-chapter.
  2. Where the Crawdads Sing is the story of Kya, a young girl at the outset of the novel living in the marshlands in coastal North Carolina. As the story continues, Kya grows older, and is left by her family to fend for herself and make her way in life.

Where The Crawdads Sing Discussion Questions

Where The Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens: A 5-Star Coming of Age Story Set in Marsh CountryAugust 16, 2018Fiction – LiteraryReleased August 14, 2018384 PagesBottom Line: Read it.Affiliate Link:Source: Publisher HeadlineI was worried would be a beautiful, but boring book, but I couldn’t be more wrong. The writing is gorgeous, the story is propulsive, and it’s 5-star immersive. Plot SummaryWhen local star quarterback Chase Matthews is found dead, suspicion falls on Kya Clark (the “Marsh Girl”), who is not at all who the town residents think she is. Why I Read ItThis book came to me unsolicited from the publisher and it’s North Carolina marsh setting intrigued me (i.e. Made me think of Pat Conroy just a bit). Major ThemesThe marsh, nature, living outside the grid, love, prejudice What I Liked.

is a bit of a genre mash-up. There’s a coming of age element, a mystery, and a bit of romance that I did not expect from this book, but that totally worked for me. I was completely immersed in this story from start to finish.

I read it quickly and looked for every opportunity in the day to pick it up. There’s a bit of a Sweet Home Alabama (the movie) feel to certain parts of the story. The story is told in dual timelinesone starting in the past and working forwards and one in present day. I love how this structure kept the story moving by keeping you wondering how the characters got from point A to point Z.

Sing

I had somewhat muted expectations going into and it defied everything I thought it would be. I knew Owens was known for her nature writing, which I thought would be beautiful, but boring. She did write beautifully about nature, animals, and marsh life, but it wasn’t boring at all.

It fit with the story, conveyed what the marsh meant to Kya, and how it shaped her into who she was. And, the story was much faster-paced than I expected.As always, the ocean seemed angrier than the marsh. Deeper, it had more to say. Not surprisingly, the marsh setting comes alive and feels like it’s own character in the story.

I also expected Kya to be a weird and unrelatable charactereccentric and “woo-woo.” But, Owens does a great job of letting her have thoughts and feelings that most regular teenage girls have. She just had some different layers over top as a result of her background and living alone in the marsh. She’s dealing with feeling like an outsider, prejudice from the town residents, surviving on her own, love, and heart-break. She’s incredibly likable and I was rooting for her. Some plot elements should have felt cliche (they’re out of a rom-com), but they didn’t. I was totally sucked in.

I waited a week after finishing this book to write my review and I’m still thinking about this story. More layers keep materializing.What I Didn’t Like. There were a couple plot choices at the very end that I thought were overkill. The story didn’t need them and I almost felt like the publisher might have pushed the author to add them to make the plot even more intricate.A Defining QuoteShe feels the pulse of life, he thought, because there are no layers between her and her planet.

Good for People Who LikeSouthern fiction, books with a strong sense of place, unconventional love stories, great writing, a fast-moving plot Other Books You May LikeAnother book with a fast-moving plot about a girl with a close relationship with nature:by Claire Fuller.