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The Singer Sisters

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It's 1996, and alt-rocker Emma Cantor is on tour, with her sights trained on a record deal. Emma's got no lack of inspiration for her confessional songs, chief among them her mother Judie, a 1960s folk legend who is bitterly disappointed by Emma's choice to skip college.

Emma is baffled by Judie's coldness. Judie herself was only eighteen when she ran away to New York to pursue music, ahead of forming the influential folk duo the Singer Sisters with her sister Sylvia.

But Judie has a long-kept secret about why she abandoned her music career at the peak of her success, which is about to unravel.

This is an epic family saga that follows mother Judie and daughter Emma as they navigate the ups and downs of music stardom - asking what women artists must sacrifice for success.

272 pages, Hardcover

First published August 6, 2024

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About the author

Sarah Marian Seltzer

6 books159 followers
Writer and reader in NYC. Author of THE SINGER SISTERS, coming in summer 2024 from Flatiron!

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 95 reviews
Profile Image for akacya ❦.
1,392 reviews286 followers
August 2, 2024
2024 reads: 221/250

i received an advanced listening copy from the publisher in exchange for an honest review. this did not affect my rating.

this book follows judie, a 1960s folk legend, and her daughter emma, a 1990s alt-rocker. nobody knows why judie quit music at the height of her career, but as tensions rise between judie and emma, these secrets are soon to be revealed.

i love multigenerational stories, and i love reading about fictional celebrities, so i was very excited to start this one! honestly, i was a lot more interested in judie’s story (but that’s not to say i wasn’t also interested in emma’s!). judie came from a strict family and ended up running away to new york to pursue a career in music. i loved judie’s and emma’s stories, individually and combined.

narration: there were three narrators, barrie kreinik, helen laser, and stephanie németh-parker, to reflect different viewpoints. i’m really glad there were different narrators because it helped keep the viewpoints straight and they did a great job of bringing the story to life!
Profile Image for Paul.
Author 92 books336 followers
May 5, 2024
There's a meta-genre of fiction epitomized in different but overlapping ways by Eddie and the Cruisers, Rob Reiner's This Is Spinal Tap, and Daisy Jones and the Six -- the first and the third adapted to the screen from novels -- that helps us understand what those who make music that lights up our nights are doing when they're off-stage and not in the studio. Sarah Seltzer's The Singer Singers, a debut novel to be published this August, not only fits well in that narrative family, but in some ways exceeds it. I'd expect to see it adapted on some kind of screen before too long.

The Singer Sisters actually tells us two stories, deftly interwoven. One is a moving snapshot of the folk-rock music scene, and therein the larger music venue in which folk-rock played, in the last third of the 20th century. The other is a tableau of upper middle class Jewish culture, in New York City, Boston, and beyond, in the same period of time.

See https://paullevinson.blogspot.com/202... for the complete review.
Profile Image for ReadingTilTheBreakOfDawn.
1,607 reviews77 followers
July 23, 2024
First, thank you to Macmillan audio for my advanced audio copy.

The Singer Sisters is about so much more than sisters. It's about music, talent, family, daughters, women and everything that women tend to go through when choosing a career vs family.

I enjoy a story about mothers and daughters, but this had a great little twist that added to the dynamics of the relationships between the women. Told from multiple POVs in dual timelines, we get to experience two generations of music from the 60's/70's and the 90's.
Judie and her sister Sylvia lived through the rise of folk music in the 60's and Judie became somewhat legendary for her songwriting. But after giving up pieces of herself in various ways, things changed and she had to make decisions that ultimately opened herself up into someone else.

Switching back up to the 90's, Emma, Judie's daughter, now wants to make a name for herself in the music world. She's more gritty than her mother, but learns she loves the stage. When the past comes knocking at her door, we get to see how everything collides and ultimately the choices that women have to make when it comes to family.

The narration of this book was superb. There are such distinct characters and the performances from each narrator really helped capture the growth of each character. I liked that the author included the lyrics and poetry from these artists, but I kind of wish we got actual singing. I think that would've really pushed the audiobook to another level. We get to see such growth in the characters and to see how the mother daughter dynamics change over the course of the story when secrets are unveiled.

Overall, a great debut that will pull in readers that enjoy music and the dramatics of family relationships.
Profile Image for Stacy40pages.
1,710 reviews237 followers
December 20, 2023
The Singer Sisters by Sarah Seltzer. Thanks to @flatironpub for the gifted Arc ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Two generations of musicians. Judie was a folk star in the 1960’s. Now her daughter Emma is breaking out in alt-rock in the 1990’s. As she gets deep into her mother’s music, she uncovers old secrets.

I love books with mother/daughter dynamics. This one was interesting and extra unique because of the music theme and two timelines. The sixties and the nineties are such great decade settings for fiction; add in music of the times and it makes for a great story. I really felt for the characters and got involved in their conflict. The song lyrics and poetry was a bonus.

“Her mom’s music spoke like Bruce Springsteen spoke to her, like Hole spoke to her, like Prince: a desire for freedom and belonging.”

The Singer Sisters comes out 8/6.
Profile Image for Cindy.
1,241 reviews12 followers
July 19, 2024
I enjoyed this more than Daisy Jones and the Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid. It turns out I gave that 5 stars so this deserves no fewer. It is the story of a musical family - two generations of women who write and sing songs and the men who produce their music, steal their lyrics, love and support them.
It’s about family expectations and what happens when those are out of sync with our own desires; about unexpected family, fame, and loss.
The book moves in time between generations but listening to the audiobook I was never confused about where or when I was in time (unlike some others I’ve listened to recently). Lots of music references (mostly rock and folk), and juggling careers and parenting.
My thanks to the talented author, publisher, and #NetGalley for early access to the audiobook for review purposes. The book’s publication date is August 6, 2024.
Profile Image for Alexis Smith.
178 reviews8 followers
July 30, 2024
the singer sisters by sarah seltzer 🦋 pub day: august 6th! thank you macmillan audio & netgalley for my early copy!

a family of folk-rock musicians fall apart and come together over time to deal with the secrets of the past and events of the present 🎸

I was HERE for the first part of this book but the vibes quickly changed the more I kept reading. I never really felt invested in the story or any of the characters. I was expecting to love it after hearing BIG claims comparing this story to daisy jones and the six but I was easily distracted while reading.

there were elements of the singer sisters I appreciated like the Jewish representation, depression, long lasting effects of adoption, LGBTQ-related issues and the sense of healing family trauma at the end. I just didn’t connect enough to care where it went.

if you're looking for a 2024 release focused within the music industry, I recommend honey by isabel banta! I’m sure there will be a bunch of people who will enjoy this story as it was well written, it just wasn’t the one for me. 2 stars 🎤
Profile Image for Janet | purrfectpages.
1,108 reviews49 followers
August 9, 2024
“Oh Rose knew the power of songs. They reached you in the back pocket beyond your thinking self, the place where colors and feelings and vectors of light leapt around, entered, and left you, changed from the person you were the day before, and at least temporarily stopped the questions that pounded you at night.”

The Singer Sisters is a moving, historical fiction story. Centering on two generations of a musical family, the narration mainly goes back and forth between the 1960s and 1990s. It’s in 1996 when we are first introduced Emma Cantor, daughter of famous musical parents, hoping to make a mark of her own. Knowing how hard that road can be her mother, Judie, tries to deter Emma from this path.

In the 1960s we meet Emma and her sister, Sylvia and watch their quiet rise to fame. The decisions all three women make are what give this story its lyrical quality, and what creates a literary fiction debut with resonance and rhythm.
Profile Image for Kristen Perrin.
Author 5 books750 followers
July 10, 2024
I loved this, it's the perfect summer read! It expertly blends two pivotal periods in the US music scene - the 60s and the 90s, weaving together narratives from a family of musicians that are wonderfully flawed, relatable, interesting, and creative characters. It has all the things I love in a book - family secrets, complicated love stories, drama, and heartfelt connections. Plus the covers for both the US and UK are also SO gorgeous!
Profile Image for Bookish .
160 reviews4 followers
August 4, 2024
This was a solid debut novel perfect for fans of family dramas and historical fiction set within the music industry, along the lines of the recent debut novel Honey, as well as the classic Daisy Jones & The Six. I received audiobook and e-book copies and enjoyed the multiple narrators in the audiobook version.

The plot vacillates between dual timelines: Judie and Sylvia in the 1960s, a pair of Jewish sisters who rise to fame as "The Singer Sisters," and Emma in the 1990s, who is Judie's daughter. Emma is on the quest for fame, while her mother disapproves. There are lots of other family dynamics at play, including themes of adoption/accidental pregnancy, LGBTQ representation, divorce, etc. We see the sister rivalry between Judie and Sylvia, as Judie sidelines her career to raise her family, while her husband still gets to tour as a musician, and Sylvia refuses to marry to focus on her career instead. Overall, I much preferred the Judie/Sylvia narrative, as I found the Emma character to be rather immature and annoying, with limited character development, while the latter two are very well written with lots of depth and nuance!
Profile Image for Sarah Jaffe.
Author 7 books966 followers
August 20, 2024
It's not fair to feel like I'm this much the target audience for something but I mean, a book about two generations of Jewish folk-rock singers dealing with feminism, family, and complicated relationships with ambition? Loaded with Easter egg references to USAS, Irish hunger strikers, legal/illegal abortion, Lilith Fair ...I loved it.
Profile Image for Paige Wills.
51 reviews1 follower
July 30, 2024
Loved this. Captivating story and love letter to music with meaningful family drama and a tender depiction of the sacrifices and complexities of motherhood and womanhood. so grateful for my ARC <3
Profile Image for Lisa.
576 reviews4 followers
July 5, 2024
The Singer Sisters chronicles multiple musicians from two generations as they navigate complex familial relationships while chasing fame, but at what cost? This is a story about growing up and parenting, love and family, and of course the music that binds everyone together.

I had high expectations for this book because usually I love the trope of "following singers through their career", particularly during "vintage" times. I quite enjoyed Daisy Jones and the Six and The Final Revival of Opal & Nev, and was thrilled that this story was just as good. Set in the 60s/70s (my favourite "vintage" music decades) and the 90s/00s, we follow mothers, daughters, sisters, and the various love interests of each, as their relationships intertwine throughout the decades. The thread that connects the characters and the timelines is the music, and we see behind the scenes of the music industry, the onstage and backstage antics, flashbacks about growing up and coming of age, and the strains and consequences of this life.

Since we're jumping around on the timeline of different characters' lives, the characters were at times lacking depth as we skip over parts of their lives from their point of view to shift to another character's pov from another time. There was adequate character development though: we find out enough about each to feel like our glimpses of their lives are real, and I believed their motivations and actions. It was nice to see some queer representation and an attempt at including diverse characters. The various storylines come together at the end, with a moving on stage moment for the entire family that left me feeling like I really wanted to actually be part of that audience.

The writing is accessible and easy to follow. I thought the audiobook narrator did a good job giving different voices to the different characters. There is no actual singing as part of the audio, but lyrics are included throughout - and the lyrics are moving so perhaps someone will record an album or we'll see this on the screen before too long!

Thank you to Netgalley and Macmillan Audio for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Kim McGee.
3,315 reviews86 followers
June 11, 2024
Do the sins of the parents follow the children? Two generations of great musicians try for that unreachable star and realize the cost of that fame. A complicated mother/daughter family relationship with the jealousy of the life not lived, the path not taken and a devastating secret. This is a moving story that digs down deep into the stories behind song lyrics that hold the power to finally unite or drive a wedge that can never be closed. Fans of the tv show "This is Us" specifically the mom/daughter musical link will appreciate this as will readers of books centered around the children of famous parents. My thanks to the publisher for the advance copy.
Profile Image for The One Where Aimee Reads.
139 reviews59 followers
August 16, 2024
Wow, just WOW. The Singer Sisters by Sarah Seltzer blew me away. 

It's a moving and emotional family drama. It is about creating art, your life, your legacy. You follow two generations of a family of singer-songwriters and the sacrifices they make to chase their dreams, for success, for love. The characters get it wrong as often as they get it right. They ride the highs of fame and pick up the pieces when everything falls apart. I loved the way Seltzer highlighted the challenges of motherhood and womanhood: the female characters struggle to assert their agency and chart their own course in a man's world. She shows how life is a journey and there is freedom and power that come from making your own decisions and living by your own mistakes.

Seltzer's writing had me captivated. I felt like I knew this family, these characters. The book even has beautiful and poetic snippets of lyrics from songs, because sometimes the best way to tell a story is through music. Oh, and the book has fantastic Jewish representation. 

Originally rated 4.5 Stars, but bumped up to 5 because the story has stuck with me in a way few books do.

If you love books about the music industry and family dramas, this one is for you!

Thank you to Flatiron Books and the author for the ARC.
The Singer Sisters will be out 8/6.
Profile Image for Suzanne.
171 reviews11 followers
June 4, 2024
We follow two narrators, mother Judie in the 60s, from the age of 17 and her daughter Emma in the 90s.
While both narrators are a similar age, Emma has a really grating habit of whining. The line between confidence and narcissism is very thin.
She seems a lot less grown up than Judie at her age, though growing up a nepo baby must be a very weird experience.
She does have nice character development throughout the book.
Both characters are very well written and fleshed out.
Later in the book we also get Sylvia and another narrator.
Judie and her sister Sylvia form a folk duo band “the Singer Sisters” who make it big. She is married to another artist, and for a while they are the “it” couple in folk circles.
In the book we get into the nitty gritty of growing up, families, expectations etc. While it took a while to pick up the pace, the story goes very deep and is very nuanced.
Judie, Emma and Sylvia have very distinct voices in their narration. The other one slightly less so.
It is lovely to read an uplifting Jewish story with Jewish characters that is centered around joy and music.
The book also has a nice amount of queer rep.
If you like reading about the music scene in the 60s/70s, or the 90s, this book is for you. If you like complicated families, this might also be your jam.
I really hope artists can make an album out of the lyrics in the book. I read the 60s ones as a mix of Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell, Carole King.
I highly recommend it.

Thanks to NetGalley for the ARC
July 30, 2024
A very moving and entertaining multigenerational story that takes the power and promise of music seriously.

Emma, a possibly college bound young adult is the daughter of two iconic folk stars from the 60’s and 70’s looking to establish her own star in the family celebrity constellation. But she is haunted by questions, about things in her past and present that she doesn’t understand. Perhaps the family music holds an answer? Perhaps rock ‘n’ roll is a redemptive force?

And is there a reason her mother objects so strenuously to her following in her footsteps??

Seltzer compassionately catalogues the tread and the wear the profession takes, and for one character, the transformation away from a freedom and magic seeking (and enormously talented) young artist, into a security seeking, nurturer of their children, and the challenges and tolls that accrue with those decisions. Most parents, former rock stars or not, might hum along with this familiar refrain.

Particularly noteworthy is seltzers execution situating portions the novel in the crucible years of the late 1960s, especially representing the possibilities it represented for women. Also, her descriptions of the creative process, dynamics and relationships between bandmates and collaborators really strike the right chords.
Profile Image for Lana | Libraryofabibliotaph .
428 reviews11 followers
July 1, 2024
A story filled with music, anger, grief and trauma. At the end of the tunnel, there is finally light to be found in the shape of acceptance and finding the courage to move on.

However, neither the story, nor the characters, captivated/moved/intrigued me. I found this book rather boring, even though I had really high expectations (one of the reasons it being recommended to the fanbase of Daisy Jones and the Six, one of my favourite books of last year). The writing style, although I can see why it fits the story, was also too chaotic for me. All the switches in POV, plus the non linear timeline, made it too hard to keep track of everything. Sometimes you also had to read deeply between the lines, I think, which wasn’t what I was looking for in this book. Not being able to connect with the characters, not even in the smallest way, is also something that makes it way harder for me to like and enjoy a book. Nevertheless I have to say that the story was thought through, and some of the pieces fitted together nicely throughout the progression of this story.
Profile Image for Shannon.
5,990 reviews341 followers
August 7, 2024
A moving debut about a complicated Jewish family, mother-daughter relationships and the changing music scene of the 60s and 90s. This was AMAZING on audio narrated by three of my favs, Barrie Kreinik, Helen Laser and Stephanie Nemeth-Parker.

I really liked the way the story jumps from the past to the present as we follow the music careers of two women and witness their struggles with unexpected motherhood, first love, messy affairs and the politics of their time.

If you enjoyed books like Daisy Jones and the Six or Songs in ursa major, this dual timeline, multiple POV, historical fiction book is one not to miss! Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for an early digital copy in exchange for my honest review!

CW: discussions of abortion
Profile Image for Jennifer.
2,153 reviews109 followers
August 10, 2024
This novel is about two generations of a music industry in the family. The Singer Sisters of the title are sisters Judie and Sylvia, a successful folk duo in the 60s and 70s. Judie then marries another singer, and their daughter Emma becomes a musician in the 1990s.

Bouncing between perspectives and time periods, this book is a family drama spanning decades, a music industry novel, and a character novel, and it does it all really well, giving you a real feeling for the characters, their time periods, and their music with lots of song lyrics sprinkled throughout. It’s an excellent debut novel, and I look forward to seeing what Sarah Seltzer writes next!
160 reviews11 followers
August 29, 2024

“The Singer Sisters” by Sarah Seltzer is the story of 2 female folk musicians who are sisters from the 1860s. It follows their difficult path of trying to make their own way while growing up in a very musical and dysfunctional family. I am always drawn to this type of book because I love stories about Hollywood and the entertainment industry. I did learn a lot about the difficulty of becoming successful during the folk rock era especially as women. Unfortunately, this novel just didn’t work for me. I wasn’t engaged by the characters and the story just didn’t hold my interest. I almost stopped reading but wound up skimming hoping it would pull me in. I know I’m in the minority with this review so I suggest you give this book a chance if you have an interest in the music industry, and the ability for women to be successful musicians at that time in our history.

Thank you NetGalley and Flatiron Books for the ARC of this book in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Christine M in Texas (stamperlady50).
1,480 reviews158 followers
July 8, 2024
The Singer Sisters
By: Sarah Marian Seltzer
Pub date: August 6
Publisher: Macmillion Audio

1996-Emma is now on tour and is hoping for a record deal. Her mother was a folk star in the 60’s. Emma does not go to college and wants a deal. Her mother Judie was part of a folk duo with her sister Sylvia and they were known as the Singer Sisters.

In the middle of her career Judie dropped out of the music scene and has been harboring a secret. What secrets has she kept all these years. Family drama, secrets, stardom, fame, and more will be explored.

A fun audio if you’re a fan of music and family drama. I enjoyed this one. Thank you Macmillian Audio for the free audiobook.
Profile Image for Bethany.
467 reviews4 followers
August 13, 2024
Told in multiple perspectives, including Judie starting as a teenager in the 1960’s and her daughter, Emma, in the 1990’s. A story of mother and daughter relationships and what it takes, and the sacrifices made to chase your dreams. I loved the Jewish representation in this story. The backdrop of music was also welcome. Parts of the story dragged on, especially the middle section, but overall, it was captivating. The characters were likable, minus Emma’s constant whining and they were all trying to find their own way. I listened to the audiobook and enjoyed the multiple narrators that worked together to tell the story.
Profile Image for Lucy (LucysLumos).
191 reviews12 followers
August 6, 2024
The Singer Sisters

An emotional family drama, The Singer Sisters kicks off with Emma as she sets off to skip college and kick of her musical career, much to the disappointment of her mother, Judie, who followed the same path many years before. Following both Emma and Judie during this pivotal time in a young woman's life and career, both live out the burden that women musicians face in the industry, even years apart. Family secrets, sibling tension and the realities of life on the road, The Singer Sisters is a beautiful and emotional story.

I received an ALC from Macmillian audio. My thoughts are my own.

The Singer Sisters is available now!
Profile Image for Barbara Monaghan.
286 reviews5 followers
August 7, 2024
With a background of folk and rock,The Singer Sisters is much more of a family story, a story about secrets, and most of all, a story about mothers and daughters. The dual timeline was great, it was fun to dive into the folk scene of the 60's and the Indie rock scene of the 90's. All of the characters, especially the female characters, are well-developed and realistic. This would be a great book club book, so much to discuss..
July 3, 2024
A family of folk-rock musicians fall apart and come together over time and deal with the secrets of the past and the events of the present.
While I can see where people are going to enjoy this book, it just was not for me. I didn't connect with any of the main characters and at times found myself rolling my eyes at their actions, especially Emma. I appreciate the subjects being discussed (especially depression and the effects of adoption on all sides of the equation), but felt like there was not enough true depth to the thoughts and actions the characters took to let me feel with them and truly live in their lives. I also did not feel much anticipation to continue reading, seeing where most of the plot threads were going and not finding myself caring when I was proven right. I usually enjoy a good character study, but I feel like there were too many characters we were trying to understand deeply and not getting deep enough, and it led me away from getting to know them as much as I wanted.
As I said, I can definitely see where people will enjoy this book. It was an easy read and there is something there for those who want it. I simply did not connect with this book, and that is ok.
Thank you to Macmillan for sending me an advanced copy.
Profile Image for Cheryl Sokoloff.
599 reviews17 followers
July 25, 2024
Great read about a multigenerational musical family. ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Profile Image for Bitsy.
79 reviews1 follower
August 1, 2024
A good story that explores familial and female relationships. The timelines blend well and I really enjoyed reading about music culture and the family members navigating their way through life. Would recommend
Profile Image for Dubi.
142 reviews2 followers
July 22, 2024
Who are the Singer Sisters? That is perhaps the most interesting question in The Singer Sisters. That is perhaps the only interesting question. As is Daisy Jones and Evelyn Hugo, half the fun is trying to identify who the sisters might have been in real life. In this case, all of the fun.

Coming out of Cambridge in the early 60s as a folk duo, with one sister eventually pairing up with an established Greenwich Village singer, you'd immediately think Joan Baez and her sister Mimi who married and recorded with Richard Farina -- and this despite Joan Baez mentioned several times as a separate real life person.

And with the sisters bearing names like Judie and Sylvia, their is the instant connection to Judy Collins and Sylvia Tyson of Ian and Sylvia, another match-up with an established singer, writer of the enduring folk classic Summer Wages -- in this book, the fictional David Canticle sings Summer Rain with Judie.

Then there is the next generation, Judie's daughter Emma, who follows in her mother's footsteps, writing songs and hitting it big with an alt-rock single that recalls an incident from her childhood. Using her mother to launch her career, as well as learning the truth about someone else from her childhood, is what drives the story and character study (studies).

Unfortunately, that drive train has too little horsepower for a full length novel. Apparently the only thing these successful and famous women are capable of doing is complaining, whether that be in the lyrics of their songs or in their endless and repetitive inner monologues and dialogues.

As a musician and a lover of novels about musicians (Mary Jane, Opal & Nev, Ava Arcana, Charm City Rocks, Goon Squad, the aforementioned Daisy Jones, The Wishbones, Wonderkid, and many more), I'm always inclined to love books like this, especially if I find insight into the artistic process, collaboration, performance, fame, and such.

I did not find any such insight here. I never felt that I was in the presence of artists or performers, I only prayed that the whining would stop. Pop music references are fun, I love using them myself, but they are no substitute for the real thing, and I never felt like I was seeing the real thing (even within a fictional portrayal of it).

Sorry, that's my honest review that I promised to provide in exchange for the audio ARC kindly provided by Goodreads. It's that much more disappointing when you want to love something and it lets you down. Lots of promise in the writing of Sarah Seltzer, maybe her next novel will grab me -- although judging by other reviews, this did in fact grab a lot of readers/listeners, so maybe it's just me.
Profile Image for Madison.
78 reviews
August 31, 2024
This was fantastic. I came across The Singer Sisters at the bookstore, intrigued by the gorgeous cover and original premise, and it did not disappoint.

At its heart, The Singer Sisters is a story of motherhood, which is right up my alley at the moment. Told through the lens of a musical dynasty, it's also about artists coming into their own, apart and together.

The feeling of this book is everything you'd want in a story about the music industry in the 60's and 90's -- a strong sense of time and place, an artistic and creative vibe, and the full sweep of human emotion.

Sarah Seltzer excels at showing vs. telling and capturing the feeling of a moment. A few of my favorite examples (character names omitted):

That night the applause was so friendly, she bathed in it, like diving into the lake on a hot day. It bit you at first and then you could swim forever.

Was this love? This loamy smell, this sense of danger and safety at the same time?

As XXX made her way back up First Avenue against the strong river winds, she fought back the thoughts that she'd promised herself she would never have: of reading magazines, feet up, with someone at home, but of taking planes with that someone, too, when the mood struck.

Caffeinated and exfoliated and just the tiniest bit stoned, she showed up at the studio again the next day, ready to work.


The only thing I'd change is the ending, and I'll leave my notes in a spoiler below. I look forward to reading more from the author!

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