The Canoeist: A Memoir


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    • Author : John Manuel
    • Binding : Hardcover
    • Dewey Decimal Number : 797.122092
    • EAN : 9780971897472
    • ISBN : 0971897476
    • Is Eligible For Trade In? : Yes
    • Label : Jefferson Press
    • List Price : $19.95 (USD)
    • Manufacturer : Jefferson Press
    • Number Of Items : 1
    • Number Of Pages : 244
    • Package Dimensions : 1.10 inches (Height) x 8.60 inches (Length) x 0.90 pounds (Weight) x 5.40 inches (Width)
    • Publication Date : 2006-04-01
    • Publisher : Jefferson Press
    • Studio : Jefferson Press

    An ardent canoeist for more than forty-five years, John Manuel was first introduced to the solace, natural wonder and exhilaration of canoeing while growing up on the Chagrin River in Ohio, paddling an old Grumman canoe under the scrutiny of his father. Decades later, as he watches his elderly dad succumb to cancer, Manuel recalls this initiation into a lifetime of canoeing with both fondness and confusion. What was the allure of rivers? Was it the challenge of rapids, the natural beauty his father had known? Or was it the need to pursue his own life, to escape from home and family expectations?At times rollicking and playful as the rapids it portrays, The Canoeist also possesses a rare emotional depth. Manuel gives us a vivid picture of his own human experience—of falling in love, its elation and heart-rending turns; the intimate connection among paddling friends; the fight to save the natural places he reveres; the frustration and joy of bringing children into the canoeing life. Chapters named for a dozen eastern rivers carry the reader from such historic events as the fire on the Cuyahoga River and anti-Nixon demonstrations in Washington D.C. to the wild and some times dangerous watersheds of Manuel’s life. In part an ode to rivers, The Canoeist also affirms the vital importance of family and friends, and reveals a portrait of America in changing times.

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    Customer Reviews:

    Rated 4.5 stars Customers rated The Canoeist: A Memoir 4.5 stars out of 5.0 based on 7 reviews:
    • "The Canoeist" is a reader's gem.

      by Frederick J. Miller (Knoxville Tennessee) - 2006-08-07  Rated 5 stars
      John Manuel's lyrical writing is evocative of Salinger and Knowles as he tells of personal rites of passage. Whether reading this book as personal memoir or whitewater adventuring, it's captivating and realistic. With each chapter focusing on a different river Manual (sometimes with friends) has paddled, comes a clear window into life experiences. The beauty and honesty of Manuel's writing makes this a memorable reading treasure.

    • Merrily, merrily, merrily . . .

      by Ed Holland (Durham, NC) - 2006-06-06  Rated 1 stars
      I'm delighted to say that I enjoyed John Manuel's book MUCH more than I expected to! (I actually rated this Four Stars - not One as indicated above - but the software won't allow me to edit this. Sorry about that, Mr. Manuel!) This was a thoroughly smooth and pleasurable read. Although I'm not a paddler, and much of the whitewater tech talk raced past me, the author's fluid language evoked a vivid sense of time, place, and character. I was very much at home with John and his band of merry pranksters, and by journey's end felt as if I knew every one of them. Read this book!

    • Moving, Exciting, Intimate

      by Katherine M. Shea - 2006-05-22  Rated 5 stars
      John Manuel's The Canoeist is a page turner at the same time it is poignant and personal. It offers vivid descriptions of dramatic and sometimes nail-biting river runs as it weaves a picture of personal growth, family love, and decades long friendships. It is intensely male, offering a window into the world of summer camps, father and son dynamics, and important relationships. I highly recommend it; it's a great read.

    • The thrill of whitewater - the quiet of the reflective pond

      by A. M. Joyner (Mebane, NC) - 2006-05-22  Rated 4 stars
      John Manuel's The Canoeist is insightful and well-paced. He intertwines quiet reflections on life and relationships with tales of trips down various rivers, providing insight into more than canoeing and rivers. Much of the book circles around Manual's prickly relationship with his disapproving father, who died before its writing, and the author's very different relationship with his own son, Jackson. Recounting a trip down the storied Nantahala with his son, Manuel writes: We rounded the bend to find a canoe broached on the rock, its bow sticking right in our path. "Draw right!" Jackson pulled hard, the sinew flexing in his thin arms. We slipped thorugh the narrow gap between the rock and the shore, punched through the tail wave, and eddied out against the bank. "Good job!" I said. Keith and Roger came around the corner, dodged the canoe, and swung in behind us. "We would've hit the boat if we hadn't seen you bogey for shore," Roger said. "Way to go, Jackson." Keith nodded his approval. I felt a sudden wave of emotion and glanced away to hide my tears. I couldn't understand what was happening. Was it just Jackson I was happy for, or was there another boy in the boat who'd waited a lifetime for a few words of praise? Like many memoirs, "The Canoeist" is an interesting recounting of people, events, time and place, but it also offers a rare and welcome perceptiveness.

    • The Rivers of a Life

      by Anna Jean Mayhew (Hillsborough, NC) - 2006-05-17  Rated 5 stars
      I watched THE CANOEIST evolve from the first scribbled pages to the last polished paragraph, and I read the book several times in manuscript form before it was published. But reading the finished product was like shooting the rapids with John Manuel as my guide...a wonderful ride! John did what many writers fail to do, which is fine-tune his book during the last few months before publication. I was delighted to come upon whole chapters revised and even more so to find added words of wisdom, eg, "...obstacles that appear so daunting often turn out to be easy, while the unnamed threats do us in." Such thoughts and observations take the reader in tandem with John, give us an intimate relationship with him as we read this story of his life. Memoir is variously defined as "an essay on a learned subject" and "an account of personal experiences" and "a narrative of something noteworthy." John Manuel's book explores all facets of memoir; he lets us look over his shoulder as he runs wild rivers and as he struggles to be a good husband, father, and friend. The book opens on the deathbed of John's father, a man we come to know as both critical and kind, both harsh and gentle, both judgmental and wise. Throughout the book John struggles to be a better man than his father was; by the end of the book we come to see that the two men are more alike than they are different, because John allows us to see his own weaknesses, and to be with him when he acknowledges his father's strengths. It is appropriate that John dedicated this book to his father, the man who first put a paddle in John's hands. From "The Chagrin" to "The Ocoee," this is a book to be savored, one riveting chapter at a time.


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