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9 Works 432 Membros 17 Reviews

About the Author

Max Wallace is a veteran investigative journalist and Holocaust researcher. For three years, he worked as an interviewer and researcher for Steven Spielberg's "Shoah Project," documenting the testimonies of Holocaust survivors. He is also the former executive director of the Anne & Max Bailey mostrar mais Center for Holocaust Studies. Winner of the Rolling Stone Magazine Award for Investigative Journalism, he is an award-winning documentary filmmaker. Wallace has been a guest columnist for the Sunday New York Times and contributed to the BBC. A native of New York City, Max Wallace lives in Montreal, Canada mostrar menos

Obras de Max Wallace

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I was unable to complete this book. The premise was very interesting, but ultimately it was too much of a slog for me to get through. Also, I'm surprised nobody corrected the error in the braille that is used everywhere that states "FTER THE MIRACLE" (Hopefully they fixed it by the paperback version!)
 
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lemontwist | 1 outra resenha | Feb 24, 2024 |
I grew up watching The Miracle Worker on television. Anne Bancroft plays Annie Sullivan to Patty Duke’s Helen, blind and deaf since babyhood, an uncontrolled child who needs taming and civilizing. One day, Helen understands that Annie’s finger language is a communication. An excited Helen eagerly wants to understand the words for everything. Sullivan has worked a miracle. It is an affecting story. But it is also a story with all that implies.

I realized that I knew very little else about Keller–except that she had an Akita named Kamikaze, a gift received while in Japan. I didn’t know anything about her “political crusades.”

After the Miracle will disrupt many misconceptions about Keller.

She read five languages. She attended Radcliffe and received a B.A.–the first blind-deaf person to attend college. Raised in the segregated South, she spoke against racism in America and Apartheid in South Africa. Her sympathies were socialist, strongly anti-fascist. She championed the rights of the poor, the working class, women, and the blind and deaf. Helen was anti-capitalist, but accepted an annuity from Andrew Carnegie. Helen had wanted to marry, but her family sent the man packing; some who knew them thought she had a sexual relationship with Annie. She rejected her family’s Presbyterianism after reading Swendenborg, attracted to the social justice aspect of Jesus’ teachings.

The biography begins with Helen’s early life and development. It traces her political development as she responsed to the changing political scene, including the rise of Hitler, the Russian revolution, Joe McCarthy, and the American presidents.

Annie Sullivan had vision problems all her life. Helen called her Teacher, and gave her credit for all of her success. After Sullivan’s health failed, other caretakers stepped in. Helen was dependent on them to relate conversations through finger language, although Helen could also read lips with her hands.

The most complete biography of Helen is analyzed for bias, downplaying her political alliances. During Helen’s life and after her death, her radical view were dampened. Her work for the American Foundation for the Blind and other groups required an idealized Helen, not a radical socialist.

After the Miracle reveals Helen’s life-long fight for social justice. And it is interesting to see how iconic personages have their public image and heritage shaped by the desires and needs of those who capitalize on them.

I received a free ebook from the publisher through NetGalley. My review is fair and unbiased.
… (mais)
 
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nancyadair | 1 outra resenha | Feb 25, 2023 |
Both Henry Ford and Charles Lindbergh had considerable skeletons in their closets and Max Wallace has brought them out for us. Wallace has little to say about the roots of either man's Antisemitism, but there is a good deal of documentary evidence to support the claim that both men were. They met on occasion, and Ford was a man of more direct influence on the policies of the German Nazi party, his publication of a book entitled "The International Jew", which found considerable favour in German circles, having perhaps international influence. Lindbergh's influence being more directly national, though the chapter on his influence on the Munich sellout of Czechoslovakia makes riveting reading. Lindbergh's area of influence was associated more with the "America First Committee", whose efforts appear to being more dedicated to the denial of aid to Britain than even-handed pacifism.
the book has copious notes and tells a sad tale of fame and some of the less happy uses to which it can be put.
… (mais)
 
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DinadansFriend | Feb 6, 2016 |
Esta resenha foi escrita no âmbito dos Primeiros Resenhistas do LibraryThing.
The story I thought I knew until I read the book! A fascinating look at this period of American History and how Ali came back to regain his heavyweight title. From hero to goat to hero a remarkable story.
 
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foof2you | outras 10 resenhas | Jun 7, 2013 |

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Muhammad Ali Foreword

Estatísticas

Obras
9
Membros
432
Popularidade
#56,591
Avaliação
½ 3.6
Resenhas
17
ISBNs
37
Idiomas
3

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