Synopses & Reviews
Folksinger Lark McCourry is haunted by the memory of a song. As a child she heard it from her relatives in the North Carolina mountains, and she knows that the song has been in her family since 1759, when her ancestor, nine-year-old Malcolm MacQuarry, kidnapped from the Scottish island of Islay, learned it aboard an English ship. The song accompanied young Malcolm when he made his way to Morristown, New Jersey, where he apprenticed with an attorney, became a lawyer himself, and fought in the American Revolution. The song went with Malcolm in 1790, when he left his family and traveled the Wilderness Road to homestead in western North Carolina, where he remarried and raised a second family.
The song, passed down through the generations, carries Malcolm's descendants through the settling of the frontier, the Civil War, the coming of the railroads, and into modern times, providing both solace in the present and a link to the past. Over the years, though, the memory of the old song has dimmed and Lark McCourry's only hope of preserving her family legacy lies in mountain wisewoman Nora Bonesteel, who talks to both the living and the dead.
Review
McCrumb writes with quiet fire and maybe a little mountain magic. Like every true storyteller she has the sight. (The New York Times Book Review)
Review
Sharyn McCrumb is one of our most gifted authors. (The San Diego Union-Tribune)
Synopsis
A song, passed down through the generations, carries a family's descendants through the settling of the American frontier, the Civil War, the coming of the railroads and into modern times, providing both solace in the present and a link to the past.