Download Your Copy Come Into The Water: A Survivor's Story Fashioned By Merlyn Janet Magner Supplied As Paperback

on Come Into the Water: A Survivor's Story

got this book for free from LibraryThing's Early ers program,

This wasn't what I was expecting, I thought most of it would be about the flood itself, Merlyn's family's deaths, her own struggle to survive in the raging currents, But most of the story was in fact about the aftermath even the longterm aftermath, decades after the flood and Merlyn's attempts to cope with what happened,

I was appalled to read about how many people took advantage of her tragedy and the town's tragedy, They looted the damaged houses and even raised money, supposedly for the flood victims, which they kept for themselves, It was not only strangers that did this, but people whom Merlyn had known and trusted, After she recovered her mother's diamond ring from the mud, one of her socalled friends tried to steal it right in front of her and several other people.
I didn't see anything about any genuine charitable efforts, and I don't know whether there weren't any or whether Merlyn just didn't write about them,

This story was often beautifully written, but I don't think I enjoyed it as much as I could have, Merlyn is often frustratingly vague about her life I suppose that might be the inevitable result of covering the nearly forty years since the flood in underpages and it felt like I was watching through a fog.
But it may be just a personal preference on my part, I would recommend this especially for those having to deal with disasters and grief, After visiting an exhibit at sitelinkThe Journey Museum in Rapid City, I set out to find a book with historical information about theflood that devastated the town of Rapid City, South Dakota there is surprisingly little available on the topic.


This book was the last thing I expected to find yet of
Download Your Copy Come Into The Water: A Survivor's Story Fashioned By Merlyn Janet Magner Supplied As Paperback
great interest to me, How many others, I wondered, experienced similar trauma, and where are they now While there was immediate assistance for flood victims, i, e. food, housing, financial assistance, how can emotional needs be addressed

While I was very engaged by Magner's story, many passages in the book are vague, and it was difficult to understand the timeline of events as her life unfolded after the flood.
Her memories tumbled out onto the pages, and this is how the book was published,

The book concludes with an afterword provided by Donald Barnett, who was the mayor of Rapid City in June, His recollection of the disaster is fascinating, and provides a brief historical overview that is a fitting complement to Magner's story,

One of the best books I've read this year, A survivor of theRapid City flood tells her story, I was very interested in the events of the flood, not so interested in her personal life after the flood, Awesome book detailing Magner's battle with PTSD and Survivor's Guilt, If you're looking for a scientific book about flooding, or a book that objectively recounts the flood in sort of a clinical way as if detailing the explosion of say Mount St.
Helen's, then this isn't your book,

If you're wondering what it would "feel" like to have your family swept away in a disasterous flood, what you would do, or what the psychological trauma might be likethen this is your book.


I would also say it's a good book for anyone who's ever lost someone they loved in a tragic accident, because it's a book about learning how to heal again.


I cried several times reading this, and because I now live in Rapid City, SD, where this disasterous flood occurred in, I really became entralled with the town's history.
I even tried to find remains of the flood, but you really, really have to look, a foundation here, a driveway that leads to nowhere there, Unfortunately, I couldn't find the location of Magner's house, Pity, because if I had, I would have laid some flowers on the hearth, which is allegedly all that remains,

The book affects you that much, Or at least it did me, Magner strikes you as a person with a poet's tenderness and heart, and you can see it in her big, soulful eyes,

Wonderful book. Even if you never come to Rapid City or see Canyon Lake, which was, I'm gathering, the "ground zero" where the dam had broken, it's still a wonderful read and piece of history.
I was in theflood in Rapid City, South Dakota so I enjoyed this story, From the author's standpoint, I can see why she wrote this book, There is a feeling of catharsis on every page as Magner divulges her life to the reader, I can see this book being of personal interest to both Magner and her friends, but I don't feel Magner is a strong enough writer to have this book engage with the wider public.
I know I wasn't engaged for the most part, I could see that she lived through a horrific event, but I had no real sense of empathy for her, simply because the writing is so flat,

The writing is the weak point of this book, The text is littered with cliches and a variety of slang, like Gawd' and Yeah' disrupting what little narrative flow this book contains, There are so many characters who are introduced and then forgotten about, then thrown back in that even with its short length under two hundred pages, it almost felt as if an index was necessary.
There is no real focus to this book, just a detailing of Magner's ancestry in the section of the book before the flood, followed by a presentation of her life after the flood.
The flood itself is only approximately a chapter in length,

I definitely think it was important for Magner to tell her story, to help clarify her thoughts and feelings surrounding the flood which killed her family.
But I think this is a personal book for Magner and fails to in being a public piece of work, I always like to start with something positive, so here goes: I bet the writing of this book helped the author cope with her issues, But the writing and story are unengaging, The first chapter alone has at least a dozen different mixed metaphors for a pain that is, at the end of the chapter, still not clear, Darlings need to be killed a la Will Faulkner, Maybe I'll try reading it again when I have more patience, or at least skip ahead to the relevant story about the flood, This is a great example of someone with a powerful, important story to tell but without the ability to tell it in a way that reads well, Ms. Magner's incredible story of surviving theRapid City flood, which killed most of her family, would probably have best been served in the hands of an established writer or with the assistance of a ghost writer.
As a resident of Rapid City, I was eager to read this firstperson story but it falls apart under poor story constructs and lack of structure, The book started out with exxciting moments from the flood and then just went down the drain, Rapid City, South Dakota, June,, people died,are still missing,

In the midst of one of the worst floods in the history of the United States, one young woman clung to the roof of a house, desperately holding on to the vestiges of her life.
At the same time, the massive flood surging down from the Black Hills and through the city swept away everything and everybody she loved,

Somehow, Merlyn Magner survived that horrific night, but she lost her brother, mother and father to the rampaging water, Questions coursed through her mind then and for much of the rest of her life: Why did this happen Why did my family die Why did I survive What does it all mean Rescued from that rooftop, Merlyn set out to find the answers to these questions.
She searched for comprehension, for a sense of place, for meaning,

Her search took her from the Black Hills on a journey around the United States and then the world, traversing the globe to escape the memories and the pain.
From within this fractured fairy tale, she began a poignant, spiritual journey that would help her make sense of one horrendous night, .