
Summer Bird Blue
Failed to add items
Add to Cart failed.
Add to Wish List failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
$0.00 for first 30 days
Buy for $17.19
No default payment method selected.
We are sorry. We are not allowed to sell this product with the selected payment method
-
Narrated by:
-
Em Eldridge
Rumi Seto spends a lot of time worrying she doesn't have the answers to everything. What to eat, where to go, whom to love. But there is one thing she is absolutely sure of - she wants to spend the rest of her life writing music with her younger sister, Lea.
Then Lea dies in a car accident, and her mother sends her away to live with her aunt in Hawaii while she deals with her own grief. Now thousands of miles from home, Rumi struggles to navigate the loss of her sister, being abandoned by her mother, and the absence of music in her life.
With the help of the “boys next door” - a teenage surfer named Kai, who smiles too much and doesn't take anything seriously, and an 80-year-old named George Watanabe, who succumbed to his own grief years ago - Rumi attempts to find her way back to her music, to write the song she and Lea never had the chance to finish.
Aching, powerful, and unflinchingly honest, Summer Bird Blue explores big truths about insurmountable grief, unconditional love, and how to forgive even when it feels impossible.
©2018 Akemi Dawn Bowman (P)2018 TantorListeners also enjoyed...




















As a 31 year old woman who's experienced traumatic and intense loss multiple times in my life and is on the aromantic spectrum and is also asexual, the book spoke deeply to my on multiple levels. I would say that there is one part of the book that disappointed me by not making it clear enough that it's not a personal choice or moral failing to become suicidal and that people shouldn't have to apologize for feeling that way. But everything else in the book is so well done. I cried at multiple moments throughout the latter two thirds.
There are many intense parts and I'd consider looking up trigger warnings in other reviews before reading. there are also many times the protagonist is thinking to herself where it might be unclear for a moment in audiobook form whether it's dialogue or thoughts, but it became clear in context to me every single time and wasn't a problem. The performance was wonderful. There are times a song is sung in the book and the audiobook only reads it like a poem, but it works and you know what you are a reader are supposed to be imagining.
Aroaces relate strongly, Wonderful grief depiction
Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.
Needs a different narrator
Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.