Author Delia Owens, right, with Julie Howard, of the Ocean City Free Public Library, takes questions from the audience at the Music Pier.
By MADDY VITALE
Author of “Where the Crawdads Sing,” Delia Owens, a zoologist, nature writer and animal behaviorist, filled the Music Pier on Saturday afternoon with a talk about her best-selling novel about a girl growing up in coastal North Carolina.
Owens, 70, joked at the beginning of her remarks to a full house of about 1,000 fans that after living in isolation studying animals in a remote area of Africa, the Music Pier audience was likely the most people she ever saw in one place.
“It’s such a pleasure to be in Ocean City,” she said.
She told a story that sent laughter through the audience of a bull elephant named “Cheers” that flapped his ears, whipped his trunk and charged her.
“The level of excitement I feel now is more than from Cheers chasing me,” she said with a laugh.
Cheers eventually settled down and went about his business eating, she said.
Owens grew up in rural Georgia and moved to Africa in 1974. She lived there for 23 years and studied animals and their behaviors.
Owens co-authored nonfiction books about life in Africa with her then-husband, Mark. The two wrote “Cry of the Kalahari,” “The Eye of the Elephant,” and “Secrets of the Savanna.”
About 1,000 people filled the Music Pier to see the best-selling author.
Owens said that in the years living in some of the most remote regions of Africa, watching prides of lions, herds of elephants and troops of primates, she realized that a person does not have to live in a rural area away from it all to feel lonely or to feel isolated.
She spoke about how and why she wrote her novel. She described it as an intense love story, a mystery, and more than anything, an exploration into the raw core of human nature.
“Where the Crawdads Sing is a lot of things. One thing it is about is finding the strength to get yourself from the darkness to the light and to learn about human nature from nature itself,” Owens explained.
During the event, Owens signed her books and did a Q&A, which was moderated by Adult Programming Librarian Julie Howard.
Howard said she was amazed by the fantastic turnout.
“We are very excited to see this much enthusiasm for the book we chose. We are very happy with the response from the community,” Howard said in an interview.
Later, while addressing the audience from the stage, she said, "This year we have chosen a book that has captured the hearts of the readers and tops the charts for good reason. It has inspired spirited book clubs, brought the community together over literature and shows how connected we are. We are so honored to have Delia Owens here.”
Howard read the audience questions to Owens.
Owens was asked some light-hearted questions such as what are crawdads and some more serious questions about how she knew about "marsh people."
When asked if she spent much time revising her copy, she explained there is no perfect sentence and that she makes several revisions to her writings before she is satisfied.
Owens said she is also in the midst of writing her second novel and is looking forward to sharing it with the public, but did not elaborate on any details.

"Where the Crawdads Sing" is Delia Owens' first novel.