Tomorrow River

Tomorrow River

by Lesley Kagen

Narrated by Lesley Kagen

Unabridged — 10 hours, 33 minutes

Tomorrow River

Tomorrow River

by Lesley Kagen

Narrated by Lesley Kagen

Unabridged — 10 hours, 33 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

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Overview

During the summer of 1968 in Rockbridge County, Virginia, eleven-year-old Shenandoah Carmody's mother disappeared. Her twin sister, Woody, stopped speaking, and her once-loving father slipped into a mean drunkenness unbefitting a superior court judge. As the first anniversary of their mother's disappearance nears, her father's threat to send Woody away and his hints at an impending remarriage spur a desperate Shenny-who was named for the Shenandoah Valley-to find her mother before its too late. While struggling to get her mute twin to reveal what she knows about the night their mother vanished, Shenny is ultimately swept up in a series of heartbreaking events that will force her to face the painful truth about herself and her family.

Editorial Reviews

Kirkus Reviews

In Kagen's hardcover debut (Land of a Hundred Wonders, 2008), a young Virginia girl puzzles over her mother's disappearance. It is 1969, shortly before the moon landing and one year since Shenny's mother Evie, an educated, liberal Yankee whom Shenny's father married against his family's wishes, disappeared. Shenny's twin sister Woody-the girls are 11 when the story opens-has stopped speaking and their father Walter, a respected judge from the influential Carmody family, has become a raving drunk who locks the girls in the root cellar overnight when they disobey his orders to stay home in order to avoid communication with anyone outside the family. Tomboy Shenny and increasingly fragile Woody disobey frequently, visiting the friends Evie cultivated behind her husband's back as their marriage soured. The girls are especially fond of Beezy, an elderly black woman who was once a Carmody servant, and her handsome, blue-eyed son Sam, who used to be a police detective in Illinois before he came home to run a gas station. Since no body or clues have been found, the local sheriff investigating Evie's disappearance seems to have hit a dead end. Shenny starts her own investigation with no better luck. Her acuity is questionable. Although she claims to be surprised by her father's transformation from loving to abusive father, she was aware of the troubles in her parents' marriage which involved Walter's attempts to bully Evie the same way his father and brother bully all the women in their lives. The Carmody men are cartoonishly evil-rich, misogynistic, predatory and racist-while Shenny's Carmody grandmother is a Catholic religious fanatic. Although Kagen makes references to cultural touchstoneslike Vietnam and the moon landing, her version of 1969 Virginia veers from anachronistically innocent to anachronistically backward. And Shenny's determined pluck seems both too innocently young and too precocious to coalesce into a believable 12-year-old. Shenny starts her narration by warning that first impressions "can be dead wrong," but there's never a question as to who's good or bad in her story.

Publishers Weekly

Set during the summer of '69 in rural Virginia, Kagen's stellar third novel, her first in hardcover, chronicles the dramatic changes in the lives of 11-year-old Shenny Carmody and her twin sister, Woody, nearly a year after their mother's disappearance. Woody hasn't spoken since, and their father, a renowned judge, spends most of his nights in a drunken stupor at Lilyfield, their Rockbridge County estate, often turning violent and cruel toward his two daughters. Shenny, adventurous and bright, takes it upon herself to locate their beloved Mama and discover why she left them. In her quest for the truth, Shenny learns many heart-wrenching lessons, not least among them that first impressions “can be dead wrong.” Kagen (Whistling in the Dark) not only delivers a spellbinding story but also takes a deep look into the mores, values, and shams of a small Southern community in an era of change. (May)

From the Publisher

"...the charming, genuine voice of Shenny, whose country-Southern dialect is beautifully rendered with rhythmic cadences, is impossible to resist...Overall, it's the tender bond between the twins that redeems the world from the cruelty around them and keeps you rooting for them right up until the end."
-Milwaukee Magazine

"Shenandoah leaps off the page in vivid color: sparky, resourceful, trying to cope...and doing it with the matter-of-fact, heartbreaking courage that kids learn when there's no other choice. This book is packed with warmth, wit, intelligence, images savory enough to taste-and deep dark places that are all the more terrible for being surrounded by so much brightness."
-Tana French, New York Times bestselling author of In the Woods and The Likeness

"Be prepared for all your other obligations to be neglected when you begin Tomorrow River. I fell so deeply in love with the spunky, brave, broken- hearted Shenny and her fragile twin Woody that I couldn't rest or concentrate on anything else...Shenny warns us early on that first impressions 'can be dead wrong,' and that holds true to the last page of the novel. I was continually surprised, and as a reader that means continually delighted-a rare gift."
-Katrina Kittle, author of The Kindness of Strangers

Library Journal - Audio

Shenandoah Carmody is determined to track her mother, who has been missing for almost a year. Problem is, Shenny is only 11 and forbidden to leave the house by her father, who drinks too much and has gotten much stricter, even cruel. She also has to care for her twin, Woody, who's so badly traumatized by their mother's disappearance that she hasn't spoken since and runs off every chance she gets. The voice of Shenny is the best part of this Southern gothic, which is set in 1969. She's optimistic, determined, devious, precocious to the point of implausibility, and wrong about practically everything. VERDICT Author Kagen also narrates and her drawl slathers on the charm. The reading, along with a few real surprises, makes this a good bet.—John Hiett, Iowa City P.L.

AUGUST 2012 - AudioFile

Author Lesley Kagen succeeds as narrator with a solid performance of this audiobook, a literary thriller set in 1969 in rural Virginia. It’s a first-person narrative, told from the point of view of Shenandoah, an enterprising, observant tween whose vocabulary is peppered with legal jargon. Her twin sister, Woody, lacks the same emotional fortitude and, triggered by their mom’s disappearance, has withdrawn into a silent world. As the mystery progresses, the teens learn dark secrets about their drunk of a dad (a local judge) and their off-kilter Southern family. There are moments when the listener may wonder what a professional narrator would have done with the same material, but Kagen (who has voice-over experience) succeeds by carefully balancing an author’s sense of intimacy with a narrator’s sense of drama. R.W.S. © AudioFile 2012, Portland, Maine

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169523881
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Publication date: 03/01/2012
Edition description: Unabridged
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