A Sound Like Thunder

A Sound Like Thunder

by Sonny Brewer

Narrated by Steven Boyer

Unabridged — 6 hours, 46 minutes

A Sound Like Thunder

A Sound Like Thunder

by Sonny Brewer

Narrated by Steven Boyer

Unabridged — 6 hours, 46 minutes

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Overview

Author of the critically acclaimed book The Poet of Tolstoy Park (J0001), Sonny Brewer writes compelling Southern novels that resonate strongly with readers. When 80-year-old Rove MacNee sets about to tell his life's story, he begins a coming-of-age narrative taking place in the small gulf coast town of Fairhope, Alabama. The son of an alcoholic captain, Rove finds peace casting his fishing net into the sea-but soon he will face the crossroads of his life.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

To tell a classic, if overwrought bildungsroman complete with teenage boy, quiet younger brother, alcoholic father, possibly cheating mother and a boat Brewer returns to Fairhope, Ala., the setting of his 2005 debut, The Poet of Tolstoy Park. As WWII rages in Europe (Pearl Harbor is still a sleepy navy outpost), 16-year-old Rove MacNee's Granny Wooten, who always gave him "the right book at the right time," dies. On the day of her funeral, Rove witnesses his violent, alcoholic father, ship captain Dominus MacNee, threatening his German neighbor, Josef Unruh, with a knife. Soon, Dominus, a locally notorious philanderer, is in jail on attempted murder charges, leaving Rove to figure out whether his mother, Lillian, is having an affair with Josef. As Rove tumbles out of childhood, Josef offers him a fixer-upper boat, and Rove goes to live on it, taking comfort in his family's tradition of fishing, sailing and living on the sea. Though the story can buckle beneath the weight of its sentimentality, Brewer's fans will enjoy his graceful crafting of characters and the budding romance between Rove and Anna Pearl, a schoolmate with a "fire-bearing spirit." (On sale Aug. 1) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

For 16-year-old Rove MacNee, life in Fairhope, AL, in the winter of 1941 is idyllic, but things are about to change. War is imminent, and Rove's father, the formidable and violently temperamental Capt. Dominus MacNee, is drinking heavily. Was the captain's recent fistfight with Josef Unruh, a friend of Rove's mother, simply the result of anti-German fervor or something more sinister? In this old-fashioned coming-of-age novel, Rove learns to see his parents as real people and earns the right to call himself a captain. Brewer's (The Poet of Tolstoy Park) slow, methodical pace is appropriate to the simpler time and place he portrays, and the meticulous, almost anthropological re-creation of a bygone era will justify purchase for regional libraries. However, the broadly drawn characters are too theatrically "Southern" to be entirely believable. For larger public and academic libraries. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 4/1/06.]-Edward B. St. John, Loyola Law Sch. Lib., Los Angeles Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Brewer's second novel (after The Poet of Tolstoy Park, 2005) is a problematic coming-of-age story. The setting is the same: Fairhope, Ala., on Mobile Bay. It's November 1941, and our narrator, 16-year-old Rove McNee, is growing apart from his father, Captain Dominus McNee, a schoonerman who does commercial runs in the Delta. Everything was fine when the Captain taught Rove sailing and woodworking, but lately the old salt has turned into a mean drunk who patronizes brothels. Rove dreads his returns to their bayfront home, where he lives with his mother, Lillian, kid brother Julian and Granny Wooten, who is dying. Rove's outsize love for his grandmother blends with his love of books, which she inspired. The novel is festooned with references to Emerson, Thoreau, Yeats, et al., but their presence deprives the characters of oxygen. The other important adult is Josef Unruh, a German neighbor, who generously gave Rove his damaged sloop and helped him repair it. But how seriously can you take someone who speaks comic-book English ("Vat is ze value of . . . zees and zat")? The plot pivots on the Captain's behavior at Granny Wooten's wake. Believing, ludicrously, that Josef is a spy, and suspecting, less ludicrously, that Josef has eyes for his wife, he shoots at the German and then slashes him before being jailed, briefly. Bail? Criminal charges? Not in this jurisdiction. His father's rampage is the last straw for Rove, who holes up on his sloop. We learn a lot about the boat and Rove's fishing skills (he uses hand-cast nets), more congenial territory for Brewer, evidently, than the angst-ridden McNee household. He touches lightly on Rove's emergence into manhood, as he faces down his father andexchanges demure kisses with a potential girlfriend, but then loses control of his material in a final flurry that involves a death, a vigilante ultimatum and a family scattered to the winds. There's not much meat in this carefully garnished offering.

JUN/JUL 07 - AudioFile

Set in an Alabama fishing town at the outset of WWII, this coming-of-age story features Rove MacNee. On the day of his precious Grannie's funeral, Rove witnesses his father's brutal attack on a German neighbor. In time, Rove wonders whether the attack was motivated by patriotism or his father's suspicion of his mother's relationship with the man. Steven Boyer provides a neutral voice for this Southern story but adds a lilting drawl for Rove's budding love interest, Anna Pearl. Boyer's introspective tone is suitable for Rove's sentimental exploration of his life and his joy for his boat and the local waterways. N.M.C. © AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine

Product Details

BN ID: 2940171138868
Publisher: Recorded Books, LLC
Publication date: 03/11/2008
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

A Sound Like Thunder


By Sonny Brewer

Random House

Sonny Brewer
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0345476336


Chapter One

November 1941

Thunder, low and trembling, rolled across the breezeless bay, and I wondered from where I stood on the shaky wooden dock if the sheer weight of the sound could set tiny ripples in motion on the water's smooth face. The cypress two-by planking beneath my bare feet was weather-cracked and silvered. Many of the narrow wharf's rusting nails were loosened and backing out of the joists, allowing random boards to cup and twist, and the protruding nails to snag and bloody a boy's bare toes.

Gray dawn had not long since arisen, and my mother would be stirring the house to life, waking my younger brother, just turned ten. She would also awaken my grandmother, who had moved in with us soon after Grandpa Otis died.

My father was not at home, and the world was quiet.

Along this stretch of Alabama bayfront, no windows I could see were yet yellow with light, and I saw no one else moving. Ten or so miles to the north and west there on the other shore, across the smoky water the city of Mobile was still sleeping.

My father was captain of the Mary Foster, a fifty-foot melon schooner on a run to the New Basin Canal-front market out past Hagan Street in New Orleans. He was due back any day, maybe this morning, and usually drove home in his Ford truck from Farragut's Basin, where he kept the schooner atanchor. The captain called the basin Farragut's Turn, as did some of the older schoonermen, because it was the spot on Fish River where Admiral David Farragut, after the Civil War Battle of Mobile Bay, had found room enough to turn his gunboats around.

Sometimes, if the weather was fine, the captain would leave his truck at Farragut's and motor his broad skiff up the bay from the pass at Big Mouth, dropping off crew and deckhands at this or that fishing camp strung out down the bay. Now that I was sixteen and legal to drive, I would sometimes be sent back in the skiff to Farragut's to fetch home the truck, and I looked forward to those little excursions because I loved to drive. The run south down the bay alone in the skiff, my face skinning the wind and my hand twisting the throttle on the Evinrude, was almost as much fun.

My name is Rover, named for my father's beloved shining black Labrador retriever that drowned in the wind-tossed waves of Mobile Bay while chasing a wounded mallard. The dog had paddled madly and happily, one might guess, after the duck through the frothy chop until he sank in exhaustion in five feet of brackish water not a hundred yards offshore from our bayside cottage the day before I was born.

The captain, in naming his son after his dog, had revealed a sense of humor that I had failed to inherit. I came up short of laughing each time I fought this or that taunting schoolmate who called me Rover. On my first day of school, I had dropped the last "r" and given my name as Rove, a name I did not mind actually. Anyone who added back the "r" and addressed me so had a fight on his hands. Years later David MacFarland would lift his upper lip with his index finger and show me a chipped tooth, would turn loose his lip, and let it segue into a smile and tell me parents should be more careful what they name their kids. We were fourteen when I punched him in the mouth. I walked away with a torn knuckle on my right hand, a scar to match David's chip.

With this weather building, my father would drive instead of motoring up the bay in the skiff. Even knowing that, I looked south down the bay. I saw no skiff. I let my eyes sweep the horizon and a steam passenger ferry, an elongated black shape some miles across the flat water, was trailing a thin tendril of smoke into the dull pewter sky. It was the only thing moving on Mobile Bay as far as I could see. I lifted my shoulders against a cold shiver starting down my neck. The November morning still held the chill from last night's low temperature which had dipped to near forty degrees.

It would storm today. This odd stillness would soon be shattered, rough weather probably setting in before the Bay Queen made the dock at Stedman's Landing, three or so miles up the shore north of Fairhope. If I did not hurry home I might get caught in the rain, which, in fact, I did not mind. But, on the other hand, if I did not hurry, there was some chance that my father would be already seated at the kitchen table. I did not want to come into the house after him.

My preference, in fact, if it were not for leaving Mother alone to deal with the captain, would be to stay away entirely.

I had worked the deck on the Mary Foster, and I knew that when the captain sailed home, done with the white-shirted dealers in New Orleans who had haggled down his prices, done with the sweating thick-armed roustabouts who off-loaded the fat, striped melons--or in other seasons sweet potatoes or turpentine or what have you--and when his crew had piled them onto waiting trucks, when the captain had heeled to breezes across Lake Pontchartrain, negotiated the currents in the pass at the Rigolets and into Lake Borgne, laid down the lee rail in gusts across the Mississippi Sound, ghosted past Dauphin Island and Fort Gaines to starboard and made his cut northward into Mobile Bay with Fort Morgan off his stern quarter, when he had pointed the bow of the Mary Foster east into the narrow mouth of Weeks Bay, then slid the schooner between Fish River's twisty and wooded banks, bending around curve after curve those short four miles upstream to Farragut's Basin, when he had anchored there with the rest of the schooner fleet, then the good captain was ready for a bottle of Scotch whiskey.

I also knew, because I overheard the accusations from Mother and heard no attendant denial from my father, that the captain sometimes carried on with Creole whores at Lanaux's Landing in Magnolia Springs, and lay out drunk for several days instead of coming home when the Mary Foster returned to port. And when he'd had a sailor's fill of this merriment, the captain would drive through the farmlands rattling along Baldwin County back roads to our home south of Fairhope near Battles Wharf. Captain Dominus MacNee's homecomings were usually at the breakfast hour; they were usually noisy and threatening.

In the last two years, that long since the captain seemed to have stepped into an abyss and dragged himself out another man entirely, I had grown to sometimes hate for my father to come home, and sometimes secretly wished he would drown at sea. I believed there was at least some chance it might happen. And nights in my dream-rumpled bed, when that bad thing had there in the dark come to pass, I would awaken in tears already missing him.

Because my father might be coming home this morning, and because a profaning drunk at the breakfast table would be enough for Mother to manage without wondering after my whereabouts, and because I wished for the small advantage I might gain from being first ahead of the captain in Mother's kitchen, I thought I might better get on home. I should coil my cast net down into the galvanized bucket beside my bare feet on the dock, take up its bail, and begin walking down the bluff overlooking the bay toward home.

It was enough of a hardship on my mother that my grandmother was sickly, and enough for her to get my reluctant brother Julian moving in the morning. I should start now walking that way, and then there crossed the plain of my mind a shadow, something wheeling high up and indistinguishable, but bearing some likeness to pain. So I stood stock-still and looked out across the water's surface, settling my mind into something real, and letting my imaginings slip away.



Excerpted from A Sound Like Thunder by Sonny Brewer Excerpted by permission.
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