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Start using Mumsnet PremiumAmerican Crawdads
(16 Posts)@indigoapple - I had it for my book club and we were all in agreement about it (which is quite unusual!).
Absolutely loved this book it was beautiful.
I read this fascinating article about the author’s early life a real eye opener
Loved it. Read it last summer and still think about it.
It’s a novel so I’m not expecting it to be true to life so far fetched is fine with me.
Loved it
Loved it. I love novels set in small town America and that includes Peyton Place!
@fishonabicycle I've just finished this and I agree with you!
I thought is was a bit of a let down 😳 really far fetched and silly.
I also loved this book
I bought a copy of this a couple of days ago. BookTubers have been reading and recommending it for a while too. Looks really good. Can't wait to get started reading it.
I bet Where The Crawdads Sing will be a future classic!
Agree- one of my all time favourite novels.
I liked it too.
I’m reading it right now, almost finished it, and absolutely love it!
I loved this book!
In case anyone is interested:
The Long Tail of ‘Where the Crawdads Sing’
By Alexandra Alter
In the summer of 2018, Putnam published an unusual debut novel by a retired wildlife biologist named Delia Owens. The book, which had an odd title and didn’t fit neatly into any genre, hardly seemed destined to be a blockbuster, so Putnam printed about 28,000 copies.
It wasn’t nearly enough.
A year and a half later, the novel, “Where the Crawdads Sing,” an absorbing, atmospheric tale about a lonely girl’s coming-of-age in the marshes of North Carolina, has sold more than four and a half million copies. It’s an astonishing trajectory for any debut novelist, much less for a reclusive, 70-year-old scientist, whose previous published works chronicled the decades she spent in the deserts and valleys of Botswana and Zambia, where she studied hyenas, lions and elephants.
As the end of 2019 approaches, “Crawdads” has sold more print copies than any other adult title this year — fiction or nonfiction — according to NPD BookScan, blowing away the combined print sales of new novels by John Grisham, Margaret Atwood and Stephen King. Putnam has returned to the printers nearly 40 times to feed a seemingly bottomless demand for the book. Foreign rights have sold in 41 countries.
For the whole article:
www.nytimes.com/2019/12/21/books/where-the-crawdads-sing-delia-owens.html
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