Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts

Condoleezza Rice: An American Life: A Biography Review

Condoleezza Rice: An American Life: A Biography
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Condoleezza Rice: An American Life: A Biography ReviewA good biography should provde interesting personal insights not readily known and engaging examples that show character strengths and flaws. Once an author interjects his or her own political bias, as this "liberal" author clearly does on more than one occasion, then the reader feels as if the biography has turned into political analysis, which is precisely what happens in this book about midway through.
The author does a nice job describing the childhood, adolescence, family, and personal crises of Ms. Rice through and including her appointment as provost as Stanford. But then the author decides to simply discuss in chronological order the various political events that Ms. Rice was involved in as she entered the realm of politics and ultimately became Secretary of State. From that point on the book becomes not biography, but a superficial and biased presentation of various political events into which the author intersperses quotes from Ms. Rice. It sounded more like a series of newspaper articles than a biography.
In short, the first half of the book through the events at Stanford is worth reading. You can simply skim the rest and skip to the Conclusion, which is rather pedestrian.
There are no great insights provided in this book, but in the early chapters there is a wealth of personal and fascinating details that makes this book worth reading at all.Condoleezza Rice: An American Life: A Biography Overview

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The Courage to Survive Review

The Courage to Survive
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The Courage to Survive ReviewThough Dennis Kucinich is running for President, very little of this autobiography is about politics. It's the story of how life's circumstances shaped one man's values and forged his resolve that he could do anything and that nothing is impossible.
Through beautifully written dialogue, Dennis paints pictures of the Cleveland he grew up in and the family, friends, teachers and coworkers who impacted his life. While the book spans only his first 22 years, in that short time Kucinich faced more adversity and personal challenges than most face in a lifetime. Rather than becoming bitter or negative from those experiences, as might a lesser person, those tests of character steeled his determination and optimism.

As one who has long admired and respected the Congressman Dennis has become, this book went a long way in helping me understand how he came to be the person he is--one of great compassion, common sense, determination, intensity and optimism. He has restored my faith in America and made me proud to be an American for the first time in many years. His candidacy gives me hope of a world that `could be', if we treat each other with respect and exercise proper stewardship over the planet we call home.
Whether one is politically inclined or not, this book is highly recommended as an inspiration in courage and humanity. I've been honored to meet him on two occasions and though he is small in stature, he is a giant among men. My only wish is that the book continued on to cover the recent years. I guess I'll just have to wait until President Dennis J. Kucinich pens his memoirs.The Courage to Survive Overview

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African American History For Dummies Review

African American History For Dummies
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African American History For Dummies ReviewBook Review by Kam Williams
"African-American history, to be clear, is so much more than a handful of extraordinary individuals or practices like slavery, Jim Crow, and civil rights. A lot of it is painful, but it's also inspiring and triumphant... It took the Civil War, the civil rights movement of the 1960s, and a lot of struggle in between to secure African-Americans the basic right to citizenship that white Americans took for granted.
[This book] isn't a big sermon on the struggle; instead, it's a straightforward, interesting (I hope!), and honest overview of African-American history from Africa through the transatlantic slave trade, slavery, the Civil War, Reconstruction, Jim Crow, and the 1960s civil rights movement until now. Along the way, that history birthed a culture that includes the black church and education as well as sports, music, literature, television, and film.
--Excerpted from the Introduction
I majored in black studies in college way back when the new field of study was still generally being dismissed as a joke or, at best, as undeserving of being the focus of extensive scholarly research. So, my interest was particularly piqued by the publication of this book for a few of reasons.
First, I wondered whether the subject-matter would be presented in a serious and dignified fashion, given the "for Dummies" subtitle. Secondly, I was curious about how comprehensive the text would be, and whether the author would even be able to address most of the significant events in African-American history in a work of just over 400 pages. And finally, and perhaps most importantly, I wanted to get a sense of the opus' point of view, since there's a big difference between talking about memorable milestones from the perspective of the victims of racism and that of the perpetrators.
The good news is that African American History for Dummies passes the first two tests with flying colors. The tome is encyclopedic in scope, yet surprisingly engaging in tone, being written by someone with a gift for serving up a chronological collection of facts on a zillion different topics in a lyrical style that sounds downright conversational. Credit for achieving this feat goes to author Ronda Racha Penrice, a Columbia University graduate who has served as an editor at the Quarterly Black Review, and who has written for such publications as essence, AOL Black Voices, Vibe and Africana.com
Where I do take issue with her otherwise praiseworthy approach are on the rare occasions that she seemingly attempts to be on both sides of the fence when discussing hot button issues such as the N-word ("Slaves sometimes referred to themselves as [...]) and the Dred Scott Decision ("The Supreme Court decided that, because Scott was African American, he wasn't a citizen and therefore couldn't sue anybody.").
By trying hard not to offend anyone in the above quoted entries, Ms. Penrice risks, in the first instance, misleading impressionable young minds into believing that the N-word was a slur first used by blacks. As for Dred Scott, the actual ruling unequivocally deemed African-Americans, "beings of an inferior order, and altogether unfit to associate with the white race, either in social or political relations, and so far inferior that they had no rights which the white man was bound to respect," a far crueler declaration than the author's relatively benign interpretation.
Thus, African American History for Dummies is recommended reading for those who would prefer the truth at times tempered by euphemisms which appear intended to make the ordeal endured by blacks in this country over the ages sound a lot less monstrous than it undoubtedly was. The historical equivalent of smooth jazz.
Lloyd Kam Williams is a syndicated film and book critic who writes for 100+ publications around the U.S. and Canada. He is a member of the African-American Film Critics Association, the New York Film Critics Online, the NAACP Image Awards Nominating Committee, and Rotten Tomatoes. In addition to a BA in Black Studies from Cornell, he has an MA in English from Brown, an MBA from The Wharton School, and a JD from Boston University. Kam lives in Princeton, NJ with his wife and son.
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Murder at the Opera (Capital Crimes, No. 22) Review

Murder at the Opera (Capital Crimes, No. 22)
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Murder at the Opera (Capital Crimes, No. 22) ReviewMargaret Truman's latest Capital Crimes novel is "Murder at the Opera," featuring Mackensie Smith and his wife, Annabel Reed-Smith. Mac, a former criminal defense attorney, teaches law at George Washington University; Annabel gave up her legal practice to open a Pre-Colombian art gallery in Georgetown. Mac and Annabel dine at the finest restaurants, live in a beautiful apartment in the Watergate, and routinely hobnob with Washington's elite. They also get involved in murder investigations.
Their latest case is set in the Washington National Opera House at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. Mac and Annabel are busy preparing for a new production of Tosca, he as a "supernumerary" or extra, and she, as a member of the opera board. The drama of Tosca temporarily fades into insignificance when Charise Lee, a twenty-eight year old soprano from Canada, is found stabbed to death. At the opera board's behest, Mac asks a former policeman named Ray Pawkins, who happens to be an opera lover and supernumerary as well, to look into the crime. Naturally, Mac and Annabel weigh in with their ideas about who might have ended Charise's life.
All this occurs against the backdrop of a vague terrorist threat hanging over Washington, D. C. There is talk that an unnamed militant group is planning an attack against prominent political leaders. Officials from intelligence agencies in America and abroad tap their confidential sources to gather vital information that may help thwart a potential tragedy.
Margaret Truman is a workmanlike writer who knows how to construct a mystery so that the reader is hooked "until the fat lady sings." She populates her novels with a host of lively characters, and this one is no exception. Besides the urbane Mac and the attractive and brainy Annabel, there is Pawkins, an arrogant private investigator who dresses to kill and drives a Mercedes sedan. The question is, how does a former policeman manage to live so well? Sylvia Johnson and Willie Portelain are partners in Washington's police department who interview Lee's acquaintances, including her jittery roommate, pianist Christopher Warren, and her slimy agents, Philip Melincamp and Zoe Baltsa. Johnson and Portelain are both competent cops, but while she is a beautiful woman pursuing a degree in criminal justice, he is a street-smart veteran of the force with an oversized physique and an insatiable appetite for junk food.
One of the hallmarks of Truman's mysteries is her insider's take on the events in our nation's capital. "Murder at the Opera" has a great deal of information about how an opera is mounted, as well a glimpse of the efforts of the rich and powerful to boost Washington's cultural image. In addition, Truman provides timely information about the ways in which the FBI, CIA, and the Department of Homeland Security react to the news of a possible terrorist action.
"Murder at the Opera" is a breezy and fast-paced mystery, but it is marred by a disjointed conclusion and implausible developments that would not stand up to close scrutiny. However, Truman knows her audience well, and she delivers what they want and expect: a squeaky clean novel with gentle humor, very little gore and just enough complexity to make the reader wonder whodunit and why.
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Breach of Trust (Call of Duty Series, Book 1) Review

Breach of Trust (Call of Duty Series, Book 1)
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Breach of Trust (Call of Duty Series, Book 1) ReviewIn this suspense-filled novel, Mills wraps in romance, a solid dose of character faith, and more than one plot twist.
Paige Rogers is the librarian in a small town in Oklahoma. On the surface, she's a smart, caring, Christian with good friends and the romantic interest of the high school's football coach. Underneath it all is a past no one would have expected. Once a former CIA agent, Paige was living her life in the fast lane until a covert mission went wrong and she nearly died. She was betrayed by their leader, threatened, and forced to start her life over. But new news surfaces about her past and she begins to wonder if her decision was the right one. Now she must confront the past and potentially lose everything she's worked so hard for in her new home. And she's tested to keep safe the ones she loves and unravel the clues that will expose the man behind the betrayal.
For my first Diann Mills book, I was impressed with her technique and the seamless flow of the story. It was a quick read and kept me interested.
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