Singer, and songwriter, Carol Selick traces her coming of age story, Beyond the Song, in an autobiographical novel, set in the 1960s and early ’70s. Beginning each chapter with lyrics she wrote, she depicts the development of her alter ego Carol Marks, who rebels against her strict suburban upbringing and joins the counter culture, hoping to succeed in the music business. Carol graduated from Rutgers University and now performs a repertoire of jazz, rhythm & blues, and pop as well as her own work.
The narrator relates her tale in a warm, vulnerable, and irrepressibly zany voice as Carol goes to school in Washington DC, drops out to take a pilgrimage to Berkeley, and eventually winds up living in New York in pursuit of making it in the music business. Torn between romance and career, she continually wavers.
Her quest for freedom lands her in a series of dangerous situations and narrow escapes: she hitchhikes in California at the time of the Manson murders, attends anti-war demonstrations that turn violent, and is nearly arrested when her boyfriend is nabbed in a drug raid.
Along the way, the narrator also meets two important guides who help her sort her priorities, take herself seriously, and develop her considerable talents: Rose, a pioneering black woman songwriter based on Hall of Famer Rose Marie McCoy, Carol’s real-life mentor; and Bruce Pasternak, a fictionalized psychoanalyst who helps her establish the self-assurance to stand on her own two feet at a time when female singer-songwriters had few role models. All inform the heroine’s lyrics and narrative voice as she gradually learns to believe in herself, discipline her talent, and turn her heartbreak into song.