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 |
Learning to Swim: A Memoir |
List Price: $11.80
Your Price: $11.80 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
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Rating:  Summary: Learning to Swim Review: "Learning to Swim" by Ann Turner, was a very interesting memoir. It was rather hard to interpret and I was confused and some parts and I had to go over it a couple of times. Overall I think that each person was going to get a totally different reaction to it. I asked a friend what she thought and we just were totally A-wall to each other. But I think that the author intended the reactions to be different and that's what makes "Learning to Swim" unique. " Learning to Swim" was choppy and short, and I really did like it. It made me reflect upon a lot of different things, like someone I know who has gone through the same thing and what a trauma it must have been to be a little kid with this kind of issue and have a good memory be destroyed by a foolish and just plain stupid action. It must have been very very hard for this person, as a little girl to get through something like this, and I think that every person responds to it differently and I think that this was the author's way of expressing all of those feelings that were locked up inside screaming to get out. This memoir is written in third person which I think, makes it all the more effective. I like how she uses the pink ring as a symbol. It symbolizes her fear, anguish, and her heavy heart. And finally one day she can swim without the pink ring and she can just be herself; fun and free. The pink ring was a symbol of the heartache and the pain of this event, and when it was gone her painful, shameful, and hurt demeanor of before was gone, and she was essentially free. She learned to swim, or in this case live with out the pink ring, or all the pain and agony of this tragic event.
Rating:  Summary: Learning to Swim Review: Learning to Swim, by Anne Turner, was my favorite book that I read for the Rosewater competition. A biography, Ann's chilling tale is hard to take in at first. The things she went through were things that would be hard for any teen to mentally survive. I love how Ann divided the book into three parts. Sailing, sinking, and swimming. They were like the stages she went through, as she grew up in that one summer. The title's metaphor is great. "Learning to Swim" is how Ann finally learned to overcome her fear. She learned that the threats were not going to keep her hurt bottled inside her, and she would have to speak out. She finally swam when she told her mother about the entire ordeal. I loved this book and I recommend it to teenagers everywhere.
Rating:  Summary: A Fairy Tale World Review: The plot, with its ups and downs, it was kept me engaged with this book. The urge to know how the girl got through this situation and survived is what motivated me to finish this book. The language itself was so profound; I wanted more of these words that were filled with emotion. There is a very definite beginning, middle and end, all in which the little girls have specific emotions. Also, the character herself can be related to by many people. She is just an ordinary girl with memories of picking blueberries with her mother and spending time in the water with her father. However, one event, caused by a little boy, changed her whole perception. She wanted to live in a fairy tale word, not just because she thinks the fairies are pretty, but because that world seems like a sanctuary; a place where she would be safe from evil hands and wrong touches. This book, though short in length, had an immense effect on me as a reader. It conveyed pure emotion and the hurt of the writer can be pulled from this text. The fact that this is a true story makes the circumstances even more haunting and tragic. It is almost incomprehensible to think there are evils of this sort in the effecting children so young they can't swim without the help of a pink floating tube. It is very distressing to think that children that young can have memories that they try very hard to forget.
Rating:  Summary: Great Book!! Review: This book is highly reccomended to many girls of the age of 12-16. This book reveiws a very bad thing that you should never keep in. A young Girl named Annie who i predict is no yonger than 8. She wants her summer to be a memorable summer, she wants to learn how to swim with her cousins. She learns to swim but everytime now she swims she will think of the horrable thing that happened her ober the summer she learned to swim.
Rating:  Summary: Breif Summary and Review Review: This book of narrative poems deals with the author's emotional damage she encountered as a child after being sexually abused by a vacation friend. The emotions Ann feels and describes are paralleled to her learning to swim. The book is divided into three sections: sailing, sinking, and swimming. She begins the book as a happy exuberant child looking forward to a vacation in the summerhouse she loves. She is so looking forward to swimming on her own, without the swimming ring or her daddy's hands. She is confident and feels like she is sailing on top of the world. Her tone soon changes when Kevin, a friend down the road, takes her upstairs to read to her. Instead of reading he sexually abuses her and threatens her to never tell. At this point she feels like she is sinking. The secret she cannot tell anyone makes her feel physically sick. The hate and contempt for what Kevin keeps doing to her continue to builds up inside of her. When she tries to swim on her own she thrashes her arms and legs around until she almost sinks. Her daddy says maybe she will have better luck next time. Finally the time comes when Ann tells her mother the horrible secret she had been keeping to herself. Her father, mother, and grandfather try to instill the security and innocence in her that had been lost. Ann slowly starts to let go of the pain. She begins to return to a sense of normalcy in her life. This time when she gets in the water she forgets to be afraid. She starts swimming. This is a wonderful book dealing with the issue of sexual abuse. If something is wrong or someone is hurting you it is always better to tell someone. Then you can start the healing process. This book would be interesting to sixth graders and up due to the content and form of the text. Parents and teachers could use this book to enhance the study of english, art, social relationships, and health.
Rating:  Summary: Great Book!! Review: This book was absolutely incredible! I am so glad that I read this! After I got done reading this book, my whole family wanted to read it! They did and agreed with me and said that it was so depressing about how she was manipulated at such a young age. Although it was all written in poems, and was a short book, I had to read it slow so I could comprehend everything that was going on in those moments. I just wanted to keep reading after every page. Her details were so accurate and true. Her story was so intriguing, and I couldn't believe what happened to her. She definitely told her story well. Like I said, I loved this book. In a way though, I was glad it ended. Because she learned so much that summer, and I was happy to know that. Ann Turner described every detail so precisely and explained her story so well. I would recommend it to everyone!
Rating:  Summary: Powerful recollection of a child's loss of innocence Review: This short, easy-to-read-but-emotionally-gripping, collection of free-verse poetry is to be recommended to all ages, and both genders, of readers.
The imagery of the dusty summer house and the promise of learning to swim, the hands and smells of loving family, and the pedophilic neighbor boy, the hiding beneath the blueberry bush, the secret forced, and then exposed, has a therapeutic quality. But as an adult male who has never experienced the horror exposed in this verse, it is a revealing, and disconcerting, journey into the thoughts and emotions of the little girl who endured it.
Earlier this week a female student asked me for any books in our high school library on pedophilia. Those that I placed in her hands were so statistical and objective compared to this one. Next time, I'll be sure to recommend "Learning to Swim." It presents the victim's perspective with heart.
Rating:  Summary: The power of speech Review: Using the metaphor of learning to swim, to finding the power to speak, this book kept me reading because of the fact that it is a factual story. Along with the intriguing way this book is written in a poem form, it is a short and easy book to read. For the readers that don¡¯t understand the connection between what the author refers to simultaneously as she tells her story of the fear that she endured in her childhood life, this reading can be difficult. The very compelling tone of the authors voice is what held my attention throughout the book. Even though I experienced no such incident, I felt a strong interaction with the author, sensing the person behind the words. This writing is completely personal, honest, and it makes you think and react to the author¡¯s point of view. The metaphoric method of this truthful book¡¯s telling, and its literary style is what kept me engaged to this very courageous, moving and powerful book. This poem is a testimony to the healing power of words. It is a collection of words, rhythm, and images that has been transformed to present something painful and bitter. The alluring words and its voice is the illumination of this book, and also another aspect of this book that kept me reading.
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