Nine Ways to Cross a River

Midstream Reflections on Swimming and Getting There from Here

By Busch, Akiko

Publishers Summary:
From Thoreau to Edward Abbey to Annie Dillard, American writers have looked at nature and described the sublime and transcendent. Now comes Akiko Busch, who finds multitudes of meaning in the practice of swimming across rivers. The notion that rivers divide us is old and venerated, but they also limn our identities and mark the passage of time; they anchor communities and connect one to another. And, in the hands of writer and swimmer Akiko Busch, they are living archives of human behavior and natural changes. After a transformative swim across the Hudson just before September 11, Busch undertook to explore eight of America’s great waterways: the Hudson (twice), the Delaware, the Connecticut, the Susquehanna, the Monongahela, the Mississippi, the Ohio, and the Current. She observes each river’s goings-on and reflects on its history (human and natural) and possible futures. Some of the rivers have rebounded from past industrial misuse; others still struggle with pollution and waste. The swims are also opportunities to muse on the ordinary passages faced by most of us—the death of a parent, raising children, becoming older—and the ways in which the rhythms and patterns of the natural world can offer reassurance, ballast and inspiration. A deeply moving exploration of the themes of renewal and reclamation at midlife, Nine Ways to Cross a River is a book to be treasured and given to friends.

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ISBN
978-1-59691-045-4
Publisher
Bloomsbury USA


REVIEWS

Library Journal

Reviewed on June 1, 2007

Busch (Geography of Home ) swam across her first river just two weeks before 9/11 and ever since has felt compelled to make this an annual summer ritual. This chronicle of her experiences on rivers from the Delaware to the Mississippi between 2001 and 2005 is neither adventure tale nor technical manual but a series of reflections and metaphorical musings that at times seem contri...Log In or Sign Up to Read More

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