PRO CONNECT
Marcia Peck’s debut novel, WATER MUSIC: A Cape Cod Story, a runner-up for the Faulkner Wisdom Award for an unpublished novel, was released in 2023 by Sea Crow Press.
Other fiction has appeared in New Millenium Writings (First prize for “Memento Mori”), Chautauqua Journal, Gemini Magazine (Honorable Mention for “Lasting Formations”), Glimmer Train (finalist for Very Short Fiction Award for “The Flavor of Borscht”), 26 Minnesota Writers (Nodine Press), Tribute to Orpheus 2 (Kearney Books), three volumes of Open to Interpretation: Fading Light (Taylor and O’Neill, Honorable Mention for “Sextet”), A Sense of Place: Cape Women Writers, among others. Her flash fiction, "Long Distance,” was nominated for a Pushcart Prize
Marcia’s essays have appeared in Showcase: the Magazine of the Minnesota Orchestra, Strad Magazine, Strings Magazine, the Minneapolis Star Tribune, and Musical America.
Marcia’s writing has been inspired by her years as a cellist in the Minnesota Orchestra and the Grand Teton Music Festival in Wyoming. Her life in music has inspired her to look for the rhythms and sounds of music echoed in language.
Marcia’s current novel-in-progress, The Unattended Moment, has received Honorable Mention in the 2022 Soul-Making Keats (SMK) Literary Novel Excerpt Contest, and was a finalist for the Faulkner-Wisdom Novel-in-Progress award..
Education:
Marcia Peck studied cello at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia and Schuman Konservatorium in Düsseldorf before joining the cello section of the Minnesota Orchestra. Minnesota has provided her a rich environment for both music and writing. Through the University of Minnesota and the Loft Literary Center, Marcia has been fortunate to include Patricia Hampl, Claribel Alegria, Sandra Benitez, Marilyn Chin, Maxine Clair, Michael Collier, Scott Heim, Josip Novacovich, Paul Lisicky, Kyoko Mori and Nicole Helget among her literary mentors. Her work has been supported by the Minnesota State Arts Board, The Loft Literary Center, and the Jerome Foundation, Ragdale Foundation and Hambidge Center.
“Readers will enjoy this tense, atmospheric family drama.”
– Kirkus Reviews
In Peck’s coming-of-age novel set in 1956, a New Jersey girl struggles with family relationships while on vacation in Cape Cod, Massachusetts.
Every year, Weston and Lydia Grainger take their two daughters, Lily and Dodie, to Cape Cod for a long vacation from a blistering New Jersey summer. Weston, a mild-mannered graduate student, is the opposite of his wife, Lydia, who was born the only child to a wealthy, well-established New England family that valued tradition and etiquette over family ties. This long history of excessive concern about propriety and appearances has turned Lydia into a humorless and often insensitive mother. In contrast, Weston is bright, engaged, and eager to pass on his scholarly enthusiasm to his daughters. Weston’s efforts are successful with Dodie, who’s studious and high-achieving but proud and somewhat cold like her mother. Lily, the story’s 11-year-old narrator, shares her father’s rambunctious spirit but her musical talents likely come from her mother, a born pianist. Readers first encounter the Graingers as they make their regular summer trip, but there’s one noted difference: Despite their modest means, they’re building a house across the lake from Weston’s overbearing brother George’s sprawling home. George is intent on discrediting and lording his privilege over his brother, and on embarrassing his meek wife, Fanny. The couple’s children, Nicole and Digory, each take turns bullying their cousins, with Lily getting the brunt of the abuse. This sometimes folksy, other times stressful coming-of-age story shows how personalities can clash within a family. Peck creates a lively, compelling narrative by deftly choosing to track the story’s progress as one would track an impending storm. As the summer wears on, so does a sense of impending doom surrounding Hurricane Carolyn, which provides nature’s response to the growing tension between and among the various family members, bringing the story to a fever pitch in the last few chapters: “Everyone hoped the storm would miss the Cape and blow itself out to sea. But just when we began to think we could relax, Carolyn veered.”
Readers will enjoy this tense, atmospheric family drama.
Pub Date: May 5, 2023
ISBN: 9798986567686
Page count: 244pp
Publisher: Sea Crow Press
Review Posted Online: Oct. 19, 2023
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2023
Day job
Cellist, Minnesota Orchestra
Hometown
Belleville, New Jersey
Unexpected skill or talent
Amateur Mycologist (but rusty!)
WATER MUSIC: A CAPE COD STORY: Literary Titan Gold Book Award, 2023
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