Swimmer in the Secret Sea

by William Kotzwinkle

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First published in Redbook in 1975 to enormous acclaim, this O. Henry Award winner sold 100,000 copies in paperback. Available for the first time in hardcover, Swimmer in the Secret Sea is the poignant story of how a man and a woman endured the shock and anguish of their newborn baby's death.

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7 reviews
The beginning of this book, with Diane going into labor, reminded me so much of when we had my daughter. It seemed no amount of planning, or hours of classes, really prepare you for that initial moment of "The baby's coming!" For me, all of that training went out the door, and a crazy kind of panic swept right in. Thankfully, it didn't stay that way. Just started that way. Like this novella.

A birth, from the father’s point of view.

“He suddenly remembered the baby, the little swimmer in the sea.”
“Our baby, our little friend is being born!”
“And this, thought Laski, is why we labor, so that love might come into the world.”

“…the distance between birth and death.”
From page 40 until the end, I read this through tearing show more eyes. It is a beautifully written story, that nearly broke my heart. Five stars, but I don't think I ever want to read it again. show less
I read this long before I had children. It is one of the most heart rending books I have ever read. It is stark both in content and structure, there is not a spare word anywhere. This reflects the stark conclusion of the book itself. It is not long but its shadow will cast itself across your life. Beware
A very short but tender and sensitive look at a pair of young artists, deeply in love, whose baby dies at birth. I first read this book when it was new, in 1975, and recently found it in a box and read it again. While the subject may be heartbreakingly sad, its treatment is starkly realistic and exquisitely executed. In less than a hundred short pages, Kotzwinkle gives you much to think about - love, death, and the brevity of human life in the overal scheme of things.
Imaginez vous en hiver, en plein milieu de la forêt américaine. Votre femme a ses premières contractions. Il vous faut conduire en pleine nuit pour rejoindre l’hôpital. Vous allez être papa dans la nuit.

C’est ce moment que raconte Le nageur dans la mer secrète. Ce court roman de 88 pages se concentre sur Johnny Laski et sur sa femme Diane qui ressent les premières contractions. On va suivre les deux personnages pendant cette nuit censée être magique, la nuit où toute leur vie va basculer définitivement.

L’accouchement est décrit en utilisant la métaphore des marées (d’où le titre). La contraction monte puis elle redescend. C’est beaucoup plus beau dans le texte, rassurez-vous.

On arrive à ressentir la froideur du show more médecin et de l’équipe médicale, l’essai de proximité de l’infirmière, la solitude ou plutôt l’entre-deux du couple. De manière générale, tous les sentiments sont bien rendus dans ce livre dans le sens où ils semblent véridiques.

C’est la première fois que je lis un texte aussi centré sur l’accouchement et non sur la maternité, l’avant accouchement ou l’après accouchement. Je pense que c’est ce qui fait la force du texte et qui en fait un texte inoubliable. On nous raconte un moment de vie, un moment qui pourrait se produire dans la vie de chacun. L’auteur aurait poursuivi, il aurait été obligé d’inventer des péripéties, des sentiments grandiloquents. Cela aurait gâché son histoire et surtout sa narration dépouillée.

Je vous conseille ce texte (sauf si vous êtes enceinte, je répète) et je comprends pourquoi Actes Sud a décidé de le republier dans sa collection Les inépuisables (vous pouvez aussi le trouver en Babel donc vous n’avez aucune excuse).
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Història del naixement i mort d'un nen explicat pel seu pare

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83+ Works 8,116 Members
William Kotzwinkle was born in 1938 in Scranton, Pennsylvania. He attended Rider College and Pennsylvania State University.He worked as an editor and writer in the 1960s. William Kotzwinkle is an accomplished author who is best known for his book of the film E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial, but who has produced a range of work for both adults and show more children that often transgresses genre boundaries and the distinction between serious and popular fiction. Beginning as a children's writer with The Fireman, he then published novels for adults such as Hermes 3000, The Fan Man, and Queen of Swords, which began to establish him as an original and distinctive novelist. But it was Doctor Rat that made his reputation as a powerful fantasy writer with a sharp satirical edge. The novel focuses upon laboratory rats whose spokesman, the Doctor Rat of the title, eventually escapes from the vast laboratory where experiments on his fellow-creatures are taking place, and whose adventures are interwoven with shorter tales told by animals of different kinds who finally try to form a whole that will make humans more peaceful and benign. But they are all killed. William Kotzwinkle is a novelist and poet, who is known for his broad range of style and subject. He is a two-time recipient of the National Magazine Award for Fiction, a National Book Critics Circle Award nominee. He lives with his wife, author Elizabeth Gundy, in Maine. He has won the World Fantasy Award for Best Novel for Doctor Rat in 1977. He published The Million Dollar Bear in 1994. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3561 .O85 .S9Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
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169
Popularity
192,676
Reviews
6
Rating
(3.91)
Languages
6 — Catalan, Dutch, English, French, German, Spanish
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
18
UPCs
1
ASINs
1