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Swan Dive

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A teenage refugee adapts to a new country, a new language, new school and even finds a wonderful best friend, until the pressures of past and present collide and lead to a lie that changes everything.

Refugees from the Bosnian War, Lazar's family flees the Siege of Sarajevo and arrives in Winnipeg in the early 1990s. Despite various mini dramas unfolding at home, as his parents and older sisters navigate a new language, the bitter cold and a strange city and country, Lazar manages to find a place for himself at school, largely by making friends with Elle, a sassy, outspoken girl who divides her time between living with her hoarder mother (who stuffs their tiny apartment with bargains she finds at Liquidation World) and her hippie father, Jimmy, who lives in British Columbia. But as two geeky loners, Elle and Lazar are happy in their own bubble of friendship, especially after they form a pop duo and dream of making it big on Star Search. Soon Lazar's desperate escape out of Sarajevo seems far away, even as the trauma of his broken homeland looms large with his family at home.

Then Elle comes back from Vancouver after a summer at Jimmy's, and things are different. They're in high school, Elle has lost weight and blossomed into popularity, while Lazar remains small, skinny and forgettable. She seems to have forgotten all about their singing plans and starts spending time with a new kid, Ivan. Lazar is unmoored and filled with new longings — for Elle, for Ivan, for a sense that he belongs somewhere. His mother and older sisters worry about his health, that he's so thin, that he's not interested in sports, even though the doctors can't find anything wrong.

And then, in an impulsive moment, Lazar tells Ivan that he's seriously ill. And with this one reckless lie he suddenly gets — and loses — everything he thought he wanted.

Key Text Features
author's note
historical context

Correlates to the Common Core State Standards in English Language Arts:

CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.6.6

Explain how an author develops the point of view of the narrator or speaker in a text.

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    • School Library Journal

      July 26, 2019

      Gr 9 Up-Cris is writing his story because his therapist told him to. She tells him, "You're the hero of your story" and asks him what kind of hero he wants to be. Cris isn't sure about much of anything, except that he isn't a hero, but he writes his story nonetheless. In journal entries that go from the present in 1999 to various points in his past, Cris slowly reveals the reason he is in therapy and estranged from his best friend Elle. He writes about his therapy sessions, his family's escape from Sarajevo, and becoming friends with Elle after settling in Winnipeg, Canada. The narrative meanders as Cris avoids writing about a lie he told and the effect it had. The author, who works with refugees in Winnipeg, inserts a lot of details about the former Yugoslavia and sprinkles in some Bosnian words and phrases. The book includes an essay titled "The Tragedy of Sarajevo for Curious Bystanders," attributed to one of Cris's sisters, which explains more about the history of Yugoslavia and why they had to flee Sarajevo. VERDICT A reflective novel that explores the complexity of the refugee experience, of families, and of friendship.-Mindy Rhiger, Hennepin County Library, MN

      Copyright 2019 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      April 15, 2019
      A Bosnian teen whose family fled Sarajevo for Winnipeg in the late 1990s struggles at home and at school. Told in journal entries that his therapist suggests he write, 15-year-old Cris relates his history and the experience he and his parents and three sisters have in their new home. This format works exceptionally well for the story, allowing Cris to offer a narrative that is matter-of-fact, bitingly funny, and intensely reflective of his internal state. He deals with the experience of otherness and the constriction of gender norms and writes plenty about his withdrawn but loving Muslim father; caring but almost comically critical Serbian Orthodox mother; and the distinctive personalities of his sisters. But mostly he focuses on his closest friend, Elle, an outspoken white girl who befriends him when they are in grade five. At first Cris accepts her friendship perfunctorily, but it eventually becomes central in his life even as she begins to change and seemingly grow away from him, a story arc linked to her weight loss. With few physical descriptions, whiteness is assumed throughout although a multiracial secondary character is called out for her appearance. A short exposition at the end by one of Cris' sisters gives a pithy overview of the political and religious history of Sarajevo. A brief, poignant novel that winds up a bit abruptly, this is a heartfelt exploration of one boy's experience as a refugee. (Fiction. 13-18)

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      May 15, 2019
      Grades 8-11 Life is pretty much a mess for 15-year-old Cris Spaho, but it's only partly his fault. It's not his fault that his family was caught in the 1992 siege of Sarajevo and miraculously fled to Winnipeg, but it is his fault when he lies to a friend about being seriously ill. In this postmodern epistolary novel, Cris narrates through a diary at the insistence of his therapist, Budgie. She believes that his refugee experience must have traumatized him, but Cris' issues, for the most part, have more to do with his own choices concerning his friendship with his closest friend, Elle, who seems to be growing apart from him. A host of characters move through this story, all viewed affectionately through the sardonic gaze of this strange teenage boy. Cris is an astute observer of human foibles, and while his voice conjures Holden Caulfield at times, author Hasiuk deftly?and often humorously?handles the emotional, literary, and historical material. There's much to appreciate in this layered bildungsroman.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2019
      After escaping war-torn Kosovo, Cris and his family must start over in Canada. He's the weird new kid until bossy Elle scoops him up; years later, when a therapist asks him to journal about his life, all Cris can write about is his and Elle's falling out. This confessional diary-style story sets the pain of coming of age against the lingering, often invisible impacts of war trauma

      (Copyright 2019 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:1160
  • Text Difficulty:8-9

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