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The Water is Wide
Pat Conroy

Dial Press Trade Paperback, 2002 - 304 pages

average customer review:based on 54 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended






The Water is Wide

This is a true account of Pat Conroy's year of teaching on an island he calls Yamacraw which actually is the island of Daufuskie, one of the coastal islands of South Carolina. Daufuskie is close to Hilton Head, but the difference between them is night and day. While Hilton Head is completely modern and developed, Daufuskie is still natural, beautiful, serene, quiet and tranquil. Because the 20th century basically ignored this small island, time seems to have stood still. The students he taught, cut off from modern society, knew almost nothing of events outside their narrow and impoverished life. Conroy attempted to expose the students to a world outside of the island. While the main theme is education, a secondary and strong theme is life on the island. This book is well written. It was read after my visit to Daufuskie where I saw the school he taught in, and experiencing that really brought the book to life.


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Conroy on Yamacraw

I liked this book a lot and being a highschool sophmore I believe that it is a good book for students my age to read. I liked the way it had problems that were soon solved and they had a good number of characters. Although I did think that it was kind of confusing with all of the kids in the class I still loved all their personalities. All in all i believe that The Water is Wide is a good book and that many people should read it. I read it in about 3 days and i loved it!!!









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All veteran teachers should make time to read this book

Pat Conroy's teaching experience on an impoverished South Carolina island in 1969 is reminiscent of Eliot Wigginton's situation in Rabun County, Georgia, during the same time period. (Read Wigginton's book, _Sometimes a Shining Moment: A Foxfire Experience_, if you can locate it.) In each instance, a well-meaning and hopeful young teacher was dropped into what seemed to be an almost impossible educational situation -- an isolated community with seemingly backward students, nonexistent funds for decent materials, and goals and textbooks that didn't come close to meeting students' needs. In Conroy's case, the added strains of regional racism and administrative power games were too much to overcome, and he had to leave after serving a little more than a year there.

And yet, _The Water is Wide_ is a humorous book. We laugh at the white teacher's ignorance of the Gullah children's lifestyles, and we laugh at the children's reactions to the facts he tries to teach them. It's one "fish out of water" gag after another, so to speak. We applaud Conroy's dismissal of the educational chain of command and we cross our fingers that field trips to the mainland will come off without a hitch. We hope that the students will be better off than they ever were before his arrival; for this commentary on one year at one small elementary school stands for all the rest of us, across time, at all the other schools in the nation.

The most disturbing fact here is that those of us working in public education today can easily recognize practices that we still have to deal with: superintendents as dictators; ineffective or intimidating school boards; administrators who rule from afar and never set foot in any classroom. Most of us squeeze the living daylights out of the scantiest of budgets and rebel against the pressure to see the kids as testing statistics rather than human beings. It's all right there, in Conroy's book, and it's still in our schools today. So you can read his words and say to yourself, "Geez, at least we don't have it THAT bad," or you can find yourself commiserating with him and saying, "Wow. We're not that different. I hear you, Pat. Go for it."

"Conrack" may not have made as much of a difference in his students' lives as he would have liked. (Who among us does?) But Pat Conroy has given teachers an inspirational, impactful story: one we can learn much from.


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Really funny!!!!!!!!

This is one of the best books I have ever read! It is a great story of a teacher's journey of trying to reach not only his students, but the comunity itself. There can be some dull moments, but that is only because you are comparing it to the rest of this highly eventful story.


Candid, humorous novel

Although Pat Conroy's "The Water is Wide" talked about the injustices many of the poor blacks dealt with, it did so in a humorous tone that made the reader feel that "everything is going to be alright." Conroy himself, is the main character who displays incredible courage and dedication toward his occupation. Due to his teachings, poor blacks learned vast amounts of information we today would take for granted and consider "common sense."


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reviews: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, page 7, 8, 9, 10, 11



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