Review of The Song Journey by T.E. Scott

See full issue for 2016 09-12
 

The Rundown

The Song Journey is a beautiful and intriguing story of time travel, love, loss and family, with an invigorating backdrop of social history and music. Singer Julia MacAllistair receives a unique gift from her great-grandmother Etty before she dies. Five sheets of music which are able to transport her back in time. The magic starts when Julia begins to sing the first piece and is immediately transported back to 1906 Chicago. Each piece of music is able to transport Julia back to a time when the song had meaning. For instance, when she begins to sing Bob Dylan’s ‘A Hard Rain is Gonna Fall’ she wakes up in war torn Vietnam, singing for the troops. She also visits 1940’s New Zealand, and America just before the Civil War. When she is living in each time zone, she has no idea how or when she will return home. There always seems to be a reason she is there, or a person she is supposed to meet, including family members. During these visits, Julia becomes intricately involved in the lives of the people she meets, which leads her to constantly fear she is altering history. As the music takes her away to a different time and place, each adventure is unique, yet her journey inspires her to ask questions about her own family, their past and her future. Are there lessons to be learnt from the people she meets, and in particular, her Great Grandmother Etty?

As Julia moves through time, she experiences love, death, war and intolerance. When back in her own time, sometimes years pass before she feels able to open the box and sing the next piece of music. During this time, Julia has her own life to live and problems to solve.  With so much going on in terms of story and content, it would be easy for things to get confusing, but the author does a wonderfully gentle job of weaving the timelines and experiences across the length of the novel. Everything flows so effortlessly from one situation and realisation to the next, that the reader feels rather like they are part of it all, listening to beautiful, evocative music and riding on the waves as the story unfolds. There were a few places where the story felt a little slow to me, but I cared enough about Julia and the other characters, to want to keep on reading. I felt terribly involved in her own life decisions and revelations as well as those of the people she meets on her travels. A really fascinating and uniquely told story, with a wonderfully strong narrative voice and characters to remember. Readers who enjoy romance, adventure and historical novels will enjoy this book immensely.


The Recommendation

The Song Journey is a beautiful and intriguing story of time travel, love, loss and family, with an invigorating backdrop of social history and music. Singer Julia MacAllistair receives a unique gift from her great-grandmother Etty before she dies. Five sheets of music which are able to transport her back in time. Five adventures await her, where she will meet members of her own family, and face danger in war torn Vietnam, as well as true love in 1940’s New Zealand. A beautifully evocative and visual book about the power of music, with a wonderfully strong narrative voice and characters to remember. Readers who enjoy romance, adventure and historical novels will enjoy this book immensely. 


The Rating Reviewer Rating: 4 Stars

4 Stars (out of 5): Recommended. For the right audience, this book is a great read. It can hold its own against any traditionally published novel in its genre.

The Pros & Cons

Pros: Characterization, Dialogue, Emotional, Plot, Prose
Cons: Slow in Places

The Links

More about The Song Journey on UBR

The Reviewer

Chantelle Atkins

Visit Chantelle Atkins‘s website.
 

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