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Crossing the River

A Life in Brazil

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Overwhelmed with her fast-paced, competitive lifestyle, Amy Ragsdale moved with her husband, writer Peter Stark, and their two teenage children from the US to a small town in northeastern Brazil, where she hoped they would learn the value of a slower life. 

In this culturally rich and economically poor region, Amy and her family learn to fundamentally connect with their neighbors across language and customs. In the year they spend there, Amy grows close to her new neighbors, from the men who cut sugar cane to the clinical university students, as they became the family’s guides to Brazilian life. Elegantly written and vibrant in detail, Crossing the River tells a global story through a personal memoir, examining life without the trappings of modern American culture, and revealing surprising truths about identity, family, and love.

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    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2015
      Account of a travel-happy American family bent on a "global" education for the children. A former dance instructor at the University of Montana, Ragsdale takes a frank approach to observing life in Penedo, a colonial hill town in the northeastern Brazilian state of Alagoas, where the family of four serendipitously decided to move from Missoula for a year in 2010 and 2011. Fearless to embrace total immersion when no one, including the two children, knew any Portuguese, the family let the year unfold without trying to enforce a hurried American method to the laid-back, unbuttoned Brazilian way of life. Ragsdale grew up traveling abroad with her diplomat family, from Manila to Cairo, and had already lived with her writer husband, Peter, in places like Ghana, Indonesia, and Mozambique. They were ecstatic to find a cheap house in Penedo to rent and the ability to afford a full-time housekeeper and cook. Catholic school for their son, Skyler, 12, and daughter, Molly, 15, proved a challenge due to the language barrier, and making friends was difficult, especially for Skyler, who felt both criticized by the youth as well as adored by the girls for his blond strangeness. Enjoying little privacy or quiet-Ragsdale writes of having to let go of a Western sense of possession-the family was confronted by their senses of privilege and entitlement in terms of having the money to pay for things that the small-town Brazilians could not afford. In short, anecdotal passages the author recounts the ups and downs of daily life-befriending a series of 20-something guides, navigating the permissive teenage parties for her daughter, taking up capoeira, establishing relationships with the market vendors, and managing the rather bossy, cynical locals-with a pleasant candidness. In the end, she displays a deep gratitude for the eye-opening adventures. A pleasant chronicle of living life outside one's comfort zone.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      October 15, 2015
      The product of a peripatetic childhood spent in Egypt, the Philippines, and Thailand, choreographer, dancer, teacher, and writer Ragsdale was determined that she and her freelance journalist husband, Peter, would raise their children as global citizens. After stints in Mozambique and Spain when daughter Molly and son Skyler were youngsters, and now that their go-go teen years were upon them, the family decided it was once again time to bow out of their hectic and hedonistic American lifestyle and move someplace where the pace was slower. It didn't get much more laid-back than Penedo, an off-the-beaten-track mountain village in northeastern Brazil, where the generous and accepting locals took the newcomers in stride. Faced with an unknown language and unfamiliar customs, Ragsdale and her family met challenges on both quotidian and epic scales. Doing what the best travel memoirs domake readers want to hop a plane and walk in the author's footstepsRagsdale's insightful, incisive chronicle is also a cautionary tale about the rewards and sacrifices that come from acting on such adventurous impulses.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)

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