This is a gentle sort of love-story (stories, actually), lacking much of the fanfare and bed-rolling of most romances but still with passion and tension. But what I really love about this book is the setting, a small upstate-New York resort town and its people woven into a character all its own. Seen from both a time of plenty and a time well past its hey-day, it serves as a backdrop to much in these stories and gives them a much deeper, more authentic feel. The first - and perhaps greatest - love story of Shadow Song comes from the peculiar but very likable Avrum, a man who spends most of his life in love with a woman he can never have, the famous opera singer Amelita Galli-Curci. He attends her performances, matches her seasonal migrations, and dreams of her voice even years after her death. In 1955, he makes a strange acquaintance in main character Bobo and a decades-long friendship develops between them. And Bobo has a romance of his own, complete with a girl from a very different background who cannot be his. They are the second great love story here (though certainly not the last), and the tale around which much of the book revolves. It is a reminiscence and a re-discovery, a lovely wander where past and present meet to potentially turn the future. This is not a high-octane rush of hormones; there is not a lot of action and no shouting matches or shootings or shadowy figures on the run. And I'm glad. These stories are so much more beautiful and real without all that. Forget Michael Bay; this is a great little book.