Wilson

Wilson
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فرمت کتاب

audiobook

تاریخ انتشار

2013

نویسنده

Jeremy Bobb

شابک

9781470370251
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
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نقد و بررسی

AudioFile Magazine
In a work of this length, it would be easy for the narration to become, if not tedious, at least tiring. But the combination of the author's pacing and Jeremy Bobb's even reading makes this biography of President Woodrow Wilson flow evenly. Bobb slightly varies his pacing periodically to add a note of drama or pathos. Although he doesn't use special intonations for the wide array of quoted speakers, direct quotes are clearly differentiated aurally. Wilson was a tragic figure, trapped in his own idealism and prejudices. Berg's book captures his personality effectively, and Bobb transmits it equally well to listeners. R.C.G. (c) AudioFile 2013, Portland, Maine

Publisher's Weekly

July 8, 2013
This won’t replace John Milton Cooper Jr.’s superb 2009 biography of the United States’ 28th president (Woodrow Wilson), and one could argue that Berg’s isn’t needed so soon after Cooper’s; other than two caches of papers belonging to Wilson’s daughter Jesse and his physician, nothing significantly new about him has been learned in the past four years. Notwithstanding, Berg (he won a Pulitzer for Lindbergh) has written a lively, solid book. It’s more digestible than Cooper’s scholarly tome, and Berg does a better job of capturing Wilson’s personality. Before he occupied the Oval Office, Wilson served as president of Princeton; Berg—like Cooper—is an alumnus of the university, and is generally sympathetic to the man (he puts much emphasis on Wilson’s love for his two wives and characterizes him as a passionate lover as well as a determined leader), while taking a more critical stand against his racial views and policies, his handling of the League of Nations, and of the secrecy that surrounded his late-presidency illness. Most importantly, Berg presents Wilson’s failure to win the world over to his post-WWI vision as a personal and national tragedy. He’s right, but Berg’s likening of Wilson’s life to biblical stages is overkill (chapter titles include “Ascension,” “Gethsemane,” etc.). Fortunately, the theme of tragedy—while nothing new—binds the book and lifts it above more conventional biographies. Photos. Agent: Lynn Nesbit, Janklow & Nesbit Associates.




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