Monday, March 23, 2026

Freedom Swimmer written by Wai Chim, reviewed by Bethany Bratney


Summary
: Ming lives in a coastal village in China during the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s. He is an orphan after watching his mother die of hunger during the Great Leap Forward. His father had drowned years before after trying to swim to freedom in Hong Kong (a “freedom swimmer”). As part of the Communist re-education program, a number of city boys are sent to villages to learn the work and share their knowledge, including Li, who Ming quickly befriends. The two boys have little in common, but bond over evening swims and their shared labor in the fields. As life becomes increasingly difficult, and suspicions about Li’s family at home arise, the boys begin to ponder a better life elsewhere. 

Straight Talk for Librarians: This novel, based heavily on the lived experience of the author’s father, paints a picture of a historical time period that is not often represented in YA literature. The concept of “freedom swimmers” is both interesting and compelling and could be a strong addition to collections featuring historical fiction or international history. The prose is stark and spare, a fitting tone for a story that features so much loss, lack, and difficulty. This may make the book feel slow to some, but an astute reader will feel the tension and intensity that fuels these characters’ lives. Curricular applications abound in social studies as topics studied in government, world history, and connections to current events like refugeeism and global politics are included throughout the narrative. Freedom Swimmer is a quick read with two sympathetic main characters that will provide plenty of conversation for a bright, engaged teenager.

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