Unbeknownst to those looking in, Judy has recently come to question her husband's fidelity as well as her detached relationship with her daughter, Camille. Judy finds herself at a crossroads while renting a storage unit for her childhood furniture. Instead of giving the storage company her true name Judy writes down an alias. She then spirals rather quickly into a life where she finds herself retreating to her storage space in order to dwell in the past and relive past regrets, namely regarding her first love, Willy. When Judy's mother finds out about her secret, she pointedly says, "I think you're trying to run away from home but don't know how to do it."
As I started reading To Be Sung Underwater it quickly pulled me in and then refused to allow me to put it down. I really enjoyed how the novel switched back and forth between Judy's teenage life in Nebraska and her present life in L.A. Tom McNeal effortlessly exhibited how Judy developed and grew into an adult and how she lived as that adult.
I felt that the character of Willy was very realistic and likeable. From the style that he dressed in, to the way he spoke, Willy was a great 3 dimensional character. Judy views Willy as the man she never really left behind. Judy thinks fondly of Willy and comes to realize that not only was he her first love, but quite possibly her one true love. McNeal shows what can unfold when second chances are presented and the past makes its way into the present.
McNeal did an excellent job in creating a special relationship between Judy and her father. A summer trip to visit him in Nebraska turned into a permanent situation when Judy realized that his house and town felt more like home than her childhood home with her mother. Judy discovered a friend in her quiet father and enjoyed the time spent with him, be it driving around country roads, weeding the garden, reading aloud from novels, or doing homework at the same table that he graded papers. While they may not have spoken much, Judy found comfort and familiarity in their silence.
I thought that McNeal did a terrific job painting the setting in To Be Sung Underwater. As the story unfolded I could perfectly visualize Nebraska, along with Judy and Willy's hangouts. McNeal gave life to the lakes, back roads, little towns, and storage unit. This helped To Be Sung Underwater feel profoundly realistic.
Tom McNeal's, To Be Sung Underwater, is an excellent novel which I would without a doubt read again. I definitely recommend this novel to book lovers, both male and female. This complimentary book was received for the purpose of review from the publisher Little, Brown and Company and BookPleasures.com.
BOOK LINK
AUTHOR SITE
No comments:
Post a Comment