Something strange lurks in a bell jar in the music room of wealthy eccentric, Aaron Levine, feeding on the sounds his mercenaries create. Bassist Aerie Walker, lured back into performance after a failed odyssey in professional jazz, finds herself involved with this band of musical alchemists as a Deliverance Ministry attempts to exorcize the demons perceived to dwell in Aaron's abode.
Like so many (far too many) self-published works, this one has an uncomfortably high degree of mechanical errors; this being one of the reasons I am giving it less than five stars. That being said, Sonant is a wonderful novel and I thoroughly enjoyed reading it. Sparrow has a curious knack for dragging out a story without allowing it to slow down or grow stale--and yes, that is a rather loaded comment on my part. As I was reading the book I repeatedly found myself asking when are we going to get to the point? And then, no sooner than I had asked, Sparrow knocks the speed of plot development up a notch to keep me going. I am on the fence as to whether this is good literary technique or triage for a mildly pedestrian narrative. In either case, I was driven to finish the story and see what happens, and I wasn't disappointed! The book has a surprising ending that one cannot really see coming despite what is an obvious build-up in retrospect. Sparrow's prose is tight and focused, and her characters are rich in depth. There is a fresh contemporary quality to the story as well and her sense of place and modern Americana comes across well despite her spare details; s/he says just what s/he has to say in order to set a scene and does not belabor the process. Another aspect of Sonant that I enjoyed is Sparrow's careful tying up of details. I did not encounter any unresolved loose ends, however minor. Most enjoyable of all for me as a reader, is Sparrow's willingness to allow the reader to decide what to make of these fully humanized characters; the reader is very much the fly on the wall. A final note, the element of Magical Realism is carefully embedded into an entirely plausible world to such that the realism of the story's world enhances its impact considerably, and this may be my greatest compliment to the author. Excellent work here and I recommend it wholeheartedly!
What a quirky read. I love a book that can just lose itself in the details. In Sonant, music plays a huge part in the plot, and it was fun to just read through lines dwelling on the harmony and melody of sound. For a music lover, it's the ultimate geekfest. I was riveted.
Religion also seems to be a focus of this novel in both it's positive and negative aspects. The over zealous are humane but flawed as are the ones without faith. It's not preachy in the least. It's quirky.
My only complaint is the editing. Words were missing, creating incomplete gaps in sentences. Filling in the blank was no biggie, but the book could have used a bit more editing.
An amazing story that stayed with me long after I finished reading it. I was glued to it from the beginning. A girl names Aerie plays string bass extremely well. She is hired to play in a band that plays weird music that strengthens strange whirlwinds that turn carbon into diamonds. The neighbor woman is concerned and call in church groups to end the music. The neighbor's husband is curious and wants to discover what exactly is going on. Thought provoking!
Great to find something a little out of the ordinary. Gritty characters, may take a tiny bit to get into this one but is worthwhile. Plot thickens nicely, the characters continue to grow, and it remains nicely wierd and offbeat. Really an original idea and that's a hard thing to come up with these days.
I got this book either as free download or on sale from B&N.
Interesting but odd story, I wish it had gone into more of the metaphysical beings and less of the religious crazies. Music that caused the beings to grow and react (plus produce diamonds)but was seen as "devil-made" by the crazies.
Too many asides and not very necessary backstories.
If you can get past the awful editing then it's a good book - interesting characters, ideas and storyline. The same goes for the author's other books - Lethe, Xenolith and Peregrin.