Book Club: Heroes of the water
Good morning, and welcome to the L.A. Times Book Club newsletter.
This monthâs book club read, âWhy We Swim,â offers a welcome respite from our daily tribulations. Part memoir and part sports travelogue, Bonnie Tsuiâs latest book glides from the California coast to Icelandâs swim culture to childhood memories splashing on Long Islandâs Jones Beach. Thereâs an unexpected dip in Saddam Husseinâs palace pool and a dive into the magic of Hainan island, the âChinese Hawaiiâ perched on the South China Sea.
Along the way, âWhy We Swimâ unfolds the extraordinary stories of the long-distance swimmers â and what drives them to brave extreme cold, vicious currents, sharks and other hazards.
When you immerse yourself in water, Tsui says, you experience an âexistential shift.â âYou quite literally change the way you are in the world. Itâs not about swimming a mile or pushing yourself; itâs about a change in perspective. And donât we need that now? Isnât it wonderful to be able to do that?â
A Bay Area journalist, surfer and former competitive swimmer, Tsui joins Times readers on July 28 at 7 p.m. for a conversation with reporter James Rainey.
The book talk will be livestreamed on Facebook, YouTube and Twitter. Skylight Books has signed copies available for the event.
Sign up to join us here. Then check out this handy update from travel writer Christopher Reynolds about what pools are open in Southern California.
Best beaches and more
Ahead of her book club visit, Tsui shared the inspiration for her book and revealed a few choice swims and reads.
Favorite book about swimming or surfing: âBarbarian Daysâ by William Finnegan. The way he describes mood and the dance of boards on waves is just sublime.
Last book that kept you up at night: Louise Erdrichâs âThe Night Watchman.â Hoo boy. But honestly all her books keep me up at night.
Inspiration behind âWhy We Swimâ: There are so many books about running â the history of it, the evolutionary biology of it, how to do it better. Chris McDougallâs âBorn to Runâ has a bit of all of that, wrapped up in a narrative story with big characters. I wanted to write a book that did that for swimming.
The biggest surprise during your book research: That Guðlaugur FriðÞórsson and I would become friends.
Must-watch TV: I love âInsecure.â I could watch Issa Raeâs face all day. And I just finished âGiri/Hajiâ on Netflix. Itâs a British series about a family torn apart by yakuza-police relationships on the Tokyo-London nexus. So good.
Favorite music right now: Leon Bridges, anything from his âComing Homeâ album.
Something surprising youâve discovered in quarantine: Kombucha. I was not a kombucha person. But mix it with seltzer and a ton of ice, and it is something refreshing and entertaining to drink that is not alcohol.
Favorite place to swim: Tunnels Beach on the North Shore of Kauai.
Favorite beach in SoCal: Point Dume. An afternoon there more than a decade ago was what finally convinced me to take up surfing back home in San Francisco.
Scariest moment in the water: The first time I swam out into San Francisco Bay from the protected waters of Aquatic Park. The currents were insane. I could easily see myself being swept out to sea.
Next project: Weâre finalizing the art for my first childrenâs book, âSarah & the Big Wave.â Itâs about Sarah Gerhardt, the first woman to surf Mavericks, and Iâm so freaking excited about it. The artist Sophie Diao is making the pictures, and they are gorgeous.
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