The Bridge
The Life and Rise of Barack Obama
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
David Remnick thoroughly details the life of the 44th president of the United States, including his upbringing in Hawaii to his formative years in Indonesia and college years in California. Remnick carried out his research through a multitude of interviews, and he covers blemishes as well as achievements. Mark Deakins sounds adept, consistent, and interested in the material. He chooses not to imitate the many people quoted--from Obama's college classmates to his close advisers. That smart choice frees the listener to focus on how Obama matured in his late teens, going on to Columbia University, Harvard Law School, community organizing in Chicago, and political runs for office. Deakins provides a steady and unbiased delivery of this definitive biography. M.B. (c) AudioFile 2010, Portland, Maine
April 5, 2010
Remnick (Lenin's Tomb), editor of the New Yorker, offers a detailed but lusterless account of Barack Obama's historic ascent. As a piece of "biographical journalism," the book succeeds ably enough and offers familiar commentary on Obama's cosmopolitan childhood with strains of isolation and abandonment straight out of David Copperfield-rootless, fatherless, with a loving but naïve and absent mother, he suffered racial taunts and humiliations at the hands of his schoolmates. We read how Obama's famous composure was hard-won, how he constructed his personality in opposition to his father's grandiose self-regard, his transformation from "Barry" to "Barack," the drug use, the burgeoning racial and political consciousness-rehashing events that the subject himself has covered in his frank memoirs. But for the scope (and size) of the book, Remnick's interest is ultimately limited to a study of Obama's relationship with blackness, and Obama as the student and fulfillment of the civil rights movement-it's a rich vein but impersonal, and in the author's handling, slightly repetitive. Remnick is in deeply respectful court scribe mode, but he does shine in his treatment of more peripheral characters such as Jesse Jackson and Hillary Clinton, both of whom emerge as figures of Shakespearian psychological complexity. A well-researched biography that pulls many trends of Obama-ology under its umbrella but stints on fresh interpretations.
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