Echo will forever remain one of the best books I have ever read. When I was seven years old, I picked it up in the library and fell in love with it after reading one page, and that love has only intensified as the years have gone by.
It is a story that is utterly indescribable, and doesn’t fit into any categories. It is unlike anything I have ever read, in a genre all on its own. It is magical realism and a historical fairytale; a story of loss and hope, of courage and resilience. It is truly unforgettable.
”Your fate is not yet sealed.
Even in the darkest night, a star will shine,
A bell will chime, a path will be revealed.”
Three princesses, one prophecy, four children, and one harmonica. In a fairytale world from long ago, three sisters are given a task to end their enslavement under an evil witch—to save a soul from Death’s dark door. In a desperate attempt to free themselves, they infuse a magical harmonica with their music, passing it on in hopes that they might someday, somehow, save someone’s life through it.
The harmonica finds its way into the hands of four children—Otto in Germany, Freidrich in Germany, Mike in Pennsylvania, and Ivy in California. While most view it as just a wooden instrument, the sisters’ harmonica means so much more to each of the children, shaping their lives in different ways.
I don’t think I can put into words how much this story means to me. I know I’ve said it before but I’m going to say it again: Echo is unlike anything I have ever read and ever will read. Pam Muñoz Ryan has a genius mind—able to string together stories and characters in a way that still manages to make me fall in love with them. Nothing will ever compare to the masterful story that is Echo.
”It’s about what folks want but don’t have. No matter how much you don’t have, there’s always so much more of life to be had...and there’s equal ‘mount of maybe-things’ll-get-better-someday-soon.”
It’s truly best to go into this novel knowing as little as possible. There’s a reason the synopsis is so vague, the reading experience is ten times better if you barely know anything at all. This is why I won’t go too into detail in my review, and instead speak more generally about my favorite parts.
I first want to start off by saying that this book deserves so much more hype. It is brilliant, and yet I barely see anyone reading it. if I’m being honest, I could say the same about all of Ryan’s books, (but that’s a talk for another day.) Echo is a book that I can see having the potential to become a modern-day classic, if only it had more readers and more hype. Yes, it is an older book, and a rather thick middle-grade, but that’s not going to stop me from recommending it to everyone I know.
“The sound of music is like water finding a path.”
Music is something that plays a big role in this story, in each of the character’s lives. The sweeping descriptions of music and the way it is integrated into the book is probably my favorite part of the entire story. I have loved music myself for as long as I can remember, and started playing piano right around the time that I read this book for the first time.
I felt as if I was able to relate to the characters even more because of our shared love of music, and I still feel that way today. Including the theme of music in this novel made it so comforting, and every time I crack open the book and lose myself in the story of fate and music and wonder it truly feels like coming home.
I once heard someone compare Echo to a musical fairytale, and there’s really no other way to describe it. The way that music quite literally saves some of the character’s lives is magical, and the utmost reason I adore this book so much.
“Music does not have a race or a disposition! Every instrument has a voice that contributes. Music is a universal language. A universal religion of sorts. Certainly it's my religion. Music surpasses all distinctions between people."
Although this book is technically a middle-grade, and reads a bit like one, it is still one that I think could cross the divide between middle-grade and young adult, and even adult. There are so many beautiful aspects of the story that can be found no matter what age you read it at, and I’m still discovering some of them as I continue to re-read it over and over and over again.
If I’m being honest, I don’t think I’ll ever stop. The story of Otto and Friedrich and Mike and Ivy has bewitched me, changed my life, broken my heart.
Everyone has that one book that they will never forget, and Echo is mine.