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Friday 12 February 2016

Song of the Sea Maid by Rebecca Mascull Blog Tour




Today I am part of the blog tour to celebrate the publication of Rebecca Mascull's new novel, Song of the Sea Maid.




Song of the sea maid is the second book written by Rebecca Mascull.

In Mascull’s debut novel, The Visitors, her lead was a deaf-blind girl in Victorian Britain, in which a wonderful friendship was the base for a thrilling adventure, and included a heartbreaking love story, entwined with a ghost story. I really liked this female lead and in her second book, Mascull has again written an ambitious, but fascinating story.

Dawnay Price is an intelligent and intensely ambitious young woman, who has her pathway in life clearly defined. While travelling on this pathway, she is confronted by earthquakes and all that nature can throw at her. Along the way, she is fascinated by nature and explores caves and forests, countryside and the coast.
I loved the descriptive nature of Mascull’s narrative. The story is told through Dawnay’s own voice and at times I was able to close to my eyes and imagine the locations and discoveries made on her life journey. Dawnay appeared to be a headstrong character, believing she was ahead of time in her thoughts and beliefs, feeling so strongly that she could be outspoken at times, and ready to challenge anyone who spoke out against her, something which her male predecessors were not used to.

Mascull has written a beautiful book, which I have really enjoyed and I am sure I will be rereading this book soon and there are many locations mentioned in the book and natural phenomena that I will be googling to further understand this book. The narrative allows the reader to fully indulge in the atmosphere of the story, with Mascull cleverly interweaving Dawnay’s narrative with the smells and views, sounds and thoughts that surround her while on her journey.

This book crosses many genres – there is the definite  historical fiction element throughout, however the geographical and natural science research that has been cleverly entwined throughout the story is one which has to be defined and add in the palaeoanthropology (study of human evolution) and this book is a cleverly written tale, which is entwined with a celebration of the natural world.

Thank you to Ruby Mitchell at Hodder and Stoughton for organising this blog tour and sending me a copy of the book to review.

17 comments:

  1. Great review :)
    I had Google open when I was reading so I could research (and also because I'm bad at geography) as I read.

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    1. Wow, that is really interesting, that you were researching the places as you read, Cora. I love that idea. :-)

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  2. Thank you so much, Sarah, for such a delightful review! I'm so fascinated to hear you were Googling things as you went along! That's wonderful. Thanks so much for reading & reviewing.

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