My Weight in Water

Michael Kleber-Diggs

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Sachbuch / Biographien, Autobiographien

Beschreibung

A powerful exploration of race and swimming by a writer who “see[s] the world whole, allowing daily intimacies against a backdrop of social injustice” (New York Times).

Michael Kleber-Diggs and his twin brother, Martin, grew up in Kansas City, their family part of a prosperous community of Black medical professionals. Their father had never learned to swim, so when he wanted to buy a boat, their mother, a former lifeguard, agreed on the condition that her sons take swimming lessons. Then their father was murdered in an act of random violence, and everyone’s lives changed—but for Michael, in the years and moves that followed, swimming remained a constant.

My Weight in Water is the intimate memoir of a swimmer. It is a story of race and recreation in America—of segregation, desegregation, and justice—told through one family and their lives in the Midwest. It is a reckoning with the concept of self-care and a plea for joy. Most of all, it is a book about what it means to love an activity that leaves you vulnerable—your mostly unclothed body in close proximity to other mostly unclothed bodies, moving through the same water—when you are marked as an outsider by both your race and your size.

Transparently and gloriously written,  My Weight in Water is a definitively American work about what it costs one swimmer to enter the pool and why he does it anyway—imagining a future where all people have access to an activity that renders us weightless.

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Schlagwörter

swimming, race, pools, water, lap swimming, African American, Black, Blackness, segregation, desegregation, drained pool politics, redlining, Jim Crow, Midwest, America, United States, Minnesota, Kansas, Massachusetts, Roxbury, Wichita, weight, prejudice, YMCA, uplifting, self-care, recreation, drowning prevention, racism, memoir