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Why we Swim

Bonnie Tsui | 2021

12.99 €

3 / 5

Description

Why We Swim is propelled by stories of Olympic champions, a Baghdad swim club that meets in Saddam Hussein's former palace pool, modern-day Japanese samurai swimmers, and even an Icelandic fisherman who improbably survives a wintry six-hour swim after a shipwreck.


Book Information

Published : 2021

Language : English

Pages : 288 pages

ISBN : 1846046602

Dimension : 12.6 x 1.7 x 19.8cm


About the Author

Bonnie Tsui

Bonnie Tsui was born in Queens, New York, and raised on Long Island. As her parents met in a swimming pool in Hong Kong, it seemed fitting that she and her brother should then prepare for competitive swimming careers, which lasted a decade. She attended Harvard University, where she rowed crew, snowboarded, and graduated magna cum laude in English and American Literature and Language. She also lived in Australia, studying at the University of Sydney and writing for The Sydney Morning Herald, and won a Radcliffe Traveling Fellowship to New Zealand.

In 2009, her book American Chinatown: A People’s History of Five Neighborhoods was published by Simon & Schuster’s Free Press; it won the 2009-2010 Asian/Pacific American Award for Literature and was a San Francisco Chronicle bestseller and Best of 2009 Notable Bay Area Books selection. She is the recipient of the Lowell Thomas Gold Award for travel journalism and the Jane Rainie Opel Young Alumna Award at Harvard University. In 2017, she was awarded the 2017 Karola Saekel Craib Excellence in Food Journalism Fellowship by the San Francisco Chapter of Les Dames d’Escoffier. She also received a 2019 National Press Foundation Fellowship and a 2010 and 2021 Mesa Refuge writing residency, and was selected for the 2021 Pamela Krasney Moral Courage Fellowship.

A longtime contributor to The New York Times, Bonnie has also performed numerous times at Pop-Up Magazine and other live storytelling events. She helped to launch F&B: Voices from the Kitchen, a storytelling project from La Cocina that shares stories from cooks and kitchens that are less often heard. She also appeared as a talking head in the documentary The Search for General Tso, to explain the curiously foreign-yet-familiar quality of Chinese-American food, and was featured in the History Channel series “America: Promised Land.” She is currently a consultant on the Hulu television series adaptation of Charles Yu’s novel Interior Chinatown.

Bonnie lives, swims, and surfs in the Bay Area and is a member of the San Francisco Writers’ Grotto. Her latest book, Why We Swim, was published by Algonquin Books in 2020; it received praise from The New York Times, The San Francisco Chronicle, The Los Angeles Times, NPR, Booklist, Kirkus, and more, and is one of TIME magazine’s 100 Must-Read Books of 2020. It is currently being translated into nine languages. Bonnie’s first children’s book, Sarah and the Big Wave, about big-wave women surfers, was published by Henry Holt Books for Young Readers/Macmillan in 2021. She is working on a new book about muscle.

She also hopes, as Oliver Sacks writes in “Water Babies,” to “swim till I die.”