The Singing River
NA
Contemporary
By R.K.
Ryals
Cover
Design By Regina Wamba of Mae I Design and Photography
Synopsis:
In
Mississippi, there's a legend about a Singing River, a tragic love story that
ended with an entire Indian tribe singing a death chant as they marched
stoically into the Pascagoula River to die ...
At eighteen,
Haven Ambrose isn't just a high school graduate. In her head, she's an aspiring
writer, a traveler, a chef, a slayer of injustice, an astronomer, an
archaeologist, and the love child of a famous, rich musician. But reality is
harsher. Reality is overdue bills, a crumbling trailer, an absent father, an
old addiction, and a hot, crushing summer that may end in disappointment.
For twenty
year-old River Brayden, life seems good, but appearances can be deceiving. The
oldest son of a wealthy family, he has finished his first year at Harvard to
return home for the summer only to discover his younger brother headed down an
unforgiving road.
They will be drawn together by a song. For
during the late summer, they say the Pascagoula death chant can still be heard
near the Singing River. Its call is haunting, its chant a testament of love and
sacrifice. It calls to some ... beckoning.
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List on Goodreads - http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18132842-the-singing-river
I really liked this book. I give it 3.5 stars out of 5. It was a quick read and I read it in a few hours. You follow Haven and River with their struggles with falling for each other with their difference in social status. Can someone from a lower class fall in love and be together with someone from the upper class? Will their love be enough or will their status be too much? That is the main theme in all of this book. It will show you that the only difference is money. They go through similar struggles and problems.
Excerpt:
I stepped
toward her. “You have a way of making people relate to you.”
She snorted.
“I doubt that.”
I was in
front of her now, my face peering down into hers. “Really, you do. A few hours
of knowing you feels like days.”
“Sounds
tiresome,” she teased.
“It’s a
gift,” I countered.
There were
sudden lines in her forehead, a troubled look in her eye. “Some might call it a
curse,” she murmured. “By the end of this trip, you’ll want me gone.”
It was my
turn to frown, my gaze studying her face. She had green eyes so dark they could
be mistaken for brown and lashes so long they almost touched her brows. True,
she was more willowy than curvy, but she was beautiful in an understated,
elegant kind of way. The faint freckles on the bridge of her nose drove me
crazy.
“Why do you think
that?” I asked.
There was something stark and open about her
eyes when she answered, “Because I am better at being abandoned than I am at
keeping people.”
R. K. Ryals
is a scatterbrained mother of three whose passion is reading whatever she can
get her hands on. She makes her home in Mississippi with her husband, three
daughters, a Shitzsu named Tinkerbell, and a coffeepot she couldn't live
without.
Stalker Links:
Website - http://rkryals.com/
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/RKRyals
Amazon - http://www.amazon.com/R.K.-Ryals
Twitter - https://twitter.com/RKRyals
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