Delia Owens: Where the Crawdads Sing,
9781472154644, Little
Brown UK, pub date: Jan 17, 2019

The book has two story lines, one in the 1950ties starting with Kya’s childhood and a second one
in the sixties opening with the murder investigation into Chase Adams death.
From the beginning my
heart went out to Kya whose extraordinary childhood is spent in poverty with several
siblings, a violent drunkard of a father and an unstable mother who is always
on the brink of leaving her cabin in the Marshes coming from a more prosperous background.
When she eventually does leave following her grown up children’s lead, little Kya
is left behind with her father who disappears for weeks. Fending for herself at
a very young age barely surviving finding solace in the beauty of animals and nature
surrounding her cabin, she grows up lonely trusting only her colored friend Jumpin
and his wife who help the shy girl to survive. One day she encounters a boy of her
own age fishing and finds herself strangely drawn to him. Tate becomes her trusted
friend teaching her to read and write encouraging her to draw and document her
knowledge of the marshes.
In 1969 handsome Chase
Adams is found dead probably having been pushed from a wooden tower platform. The
sheriff’s investigation is soon directed towards Kya Clark as the leading suspect
after Chase’s parents reluctantly admit to their son’s relationship with Kya even though he was engaged to a local girl from a reputable family. Chase was not the only one irresistably drawn to the wild
beauty and sensitivity of Kya.
The southern setting
and nature descriptions, the heart wrenching narration of Kya’s survival skills, the voice of the coming of age and later of adult Kya, the
murder investigation and finally the trial in the second half of the book kept
me glued to the novel which I finished as fast as I could once on vacation. All
characters are very well drawn; a 5 star recommendation from me for this escapist novel
with a surprising ending which admittedly will mostly appeal to women.