This image was gotten out of Amazon, which is why it is not so good. |
Echo of a Song is about a business woman who throws herself
into her work at the cost of her relationship with her husband. She has an
underlying need to be successful and that really drives her life. Her
philosophy is "when life gives you lemons, fight to get your fair share,
do your damnedest to make a buck, and don’t let anyone get in your way.” But
when she has a terrible day that includes losing her job and being told that
her husband is cheating on her, she flees out of town to the house of her deceased
aunt where she just wants to be left alone. While there she encounters some
quirky neighbors who are determined to draw her out of her shell.
My favorite part of the book, to be honest, was the
prologue. It was the greatest way to start the book. I had a friend read the
prologue shortly after I got the book and read it and she agreed: it's very
intense and draws you in like no one's business. If you are someone who likes
to skip prologues (shame on you) and you read this book, you're really missing
out on a very interesting and very important part of the story.
The story, in my opinion, is a little slow at the start when
it talks about her career, but that is just because it's business-y. It's
really cool though too, because the main character is a writer and she starts
out with the business aspect of her writing and then throughout the book
rediscovers her artistic writing side. I think the fact that business shtuff is
not everyone's cup-o-tea is well acknowledged though because she intersperses
it with other non-business related segments.
The book does focus on emotions and emotional turmoil, but
it focuses are more underlying emotion rather than dramatic outward emotion.
The nice part about it was that I wasn't ever reduced to a teary blubbering
mess, which was good because sometimes I find that really tiring. If you don't
like crying when you read, I don't think you have to worry about that too much
here and I think that is because the character often turns her negative
emotions into sassy-ness. So the heavier emotions are more palatable.
So for me, the ending of the book is the most important. If
I don't like the ending, I probably won't like the book just in general either.
At the end of this book I was very happy that I read it. And I spent the next
week or so thinking a lot about it, but in a pleasant manner. (Not like the
movie Dancer in the Dark (<3) where you think about it for months after and
feel terrible whenever you do.)
I definitely recommend this book. It was sweet and sassy and
thought worthy and really funny. I actually was reading the book in class
(instead of paying attention of course) and I burst out laughing out loud in a
very quiet classroom. I think it's hard to make people actually laugh out loud
in books but I don't see why you wouldn't with this book.
If you are interested in this book, you can get it here.
I hope you all have been reading sassy books and are having
a good day! <3