HomeAllCrossing the Water: Eighteen Months on an Island Working With Troubled Boys -- A Teacher's Memoir
Skip to product information
1 of 1

Crossing the Water: Eighteen Months on an Island Working With Troubled Boys -- A Teacher's Memoir

hardcoverJune 1, 2001
Regular price $69.12 USD
Regular price Sale price $69.12 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Free Shipping
Secure Checkout
Quality Guaranteed
New In Stock
ISBN-13: 9780743202381 ISBN-10: 0743202384
Publisher
Simon & Schuster
Binding
hardcover
Published
June 1, 2001
Weight
1.0 lbs
Dimensions
22.50×2.50×15.00 cm

About this book

Crossing the Water: Eighteen Months on an Island Working With Troubled Boys -- A Teacher's Memoir by Robb, Daniel. hardcover edition. ISBN: 9780743202381.

Off the coast of Cape Cod lies a small windswept island called Penikese. Alone on the island is a school for juvenile delinquents, the Penikese Island School, where Daniel Robb lived and worked as a teacher, not far from the mainland town where he grew up. By turns harsh, desolate, and starkly beautiful, the island offers its temporary residents respire from lives filled with abuse, violence, and chaos. But as Robb discovers, peace, solitude, and a structured lifestyle can go only so far toward healing the anger and hurt he finds not only in his students but within himself - feelings left over from the broken home of his childhood. Lyrical and heartfelt, Crossing the Water is the memoir of his first eighteen months on Penikese, and a poignant meditation on the many ways that young men can become lost. Ranging in age from fourteen to seventeen and numbering up to eight at a time, some of Robbs students at Penikese have been convicted of crimes including arson, assault, and armed robbery. They are tough, troubled kids who are sentenced to the school by courts in Massachusetts and Rhode Island. During their time at Penikese, they live in a house together with the staff of four and share the responsibilities of living on the island - chopping wood, cooking meals, maintaining and repairing the buildings, caring for the farm animals, and doing other chores. For many of the students, its the first time theyve experienced such a combination of discipline and freedom, or the kind of trust extended to them by the staff. And despite their resistance and sometime wildness, Robb soon finds that they have the capacity not only to confound but to surprise him, both with their insight and their vulnerability. In Crossing the Water, he renders the boys voices and his life with them - the confrontations, the rare epiphanies, the flashes of humor - with great vividness.