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Hardcover American Sketches: Great Leaders, Creative Thinkers, and Heroes of a Hurricane Book

ISBN: 1439180644

ISBN13: 9781439180648

American Sketches: Great Leaders, Creative Thinkers, and Heroes of a Hurricane

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Book Overview

By bestselling biographer and journalist, a selective collection that illustrates his passage from school to journalist to illustrious biographer.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Observations on Leadership and Creativity

Walter Isaacson is a gifted writer with an excellent worldview. His biographies of Franklin and Einstein are among my favorite books. This book is a collection of first rate essays and articles covering an array of American political and creative leaders as well as some thoughts on journalism and its future. The essays were written over a span of several decades, so in addition to the actual essays, each contains a foreword by the author to put it into current perspective. All of the essays are good, but some are more interesting than others. Isaacson is clearly infatuated with Einstein, so Einstein gets more than his share of coverage in this collection. Very interesting and deserving material though. My favorite was the piece on Bill Gates. Longer than most, it gives the reader a real feel for who Gates is and how he is wired. The essay addresses his many incredible strengths as well as some of his flaws. The eulogy for George Plimpton was also especially good. I was particularly interested in the book's introduction in which the author explains his own background and how he got from New Orleans to Harvard to the editorship of Time and Chairmanship of CNN. Good stuff!!

GREAT BOOK OF AMERICAN THINKERS

GREAT BOOK OF AMERICAN THINKERS WHICH I GAVE AS A GIFT TO SOMEONE INTERESTED IN IMPORTANT AMERICAN THINKERS AND MOVERS. IT IS VERY WELL WRITTEN BY AN AMAZING AMERICAN THINKER HIMSELF - WALTER ISAACSON. IT IS GOOD FOR THOSE INTERESTED IN UNDERSTANDING BOTH OUR CONTEMPORARY STATE AS WELL AS OUR HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE. MR ISAACSON UNDERSTANDS HOW TO PAINT AN AMAZINGLY HUMAN PORTRAIT OF ICONS, AS EVIDENCED BY PRIOR WRITINGS ABOUT ALBERT EINSTEIN AND BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. EXCELLENT READ.

A compilation of essays on American leadership and influence

Not knowing much about this book but having read Walter Isaacon's marvelous biography of Benjamin Franklin, I purchased this out of interest in the topic: American leadership and historical events. American Sketches is a kind of tapestry of successful people, their lives, their contributions, their idiosyncrasies, and their role in shaping our country and our culture. Told in a series of journalistic style essays, the book has a simmering energy and grace that makes each chapter both independent and connected to an overriding theme of optimism, progress, and tolerance. The people he examines include Benjamin Franklin, Albert Einstein, Bill Clinton, John Adams, Henry Kissinger, Bill Gates, Colin Powell, Ronald Reagan, George Plimpton, and many others. Asides about Walker Percy, Gorbachev, Henry Grunwald, and different political figures add to an already fascinating book, a book that demonstrates the power of American ingenuity, tenacity, and intellect. Each essay contains a pearl of wisdom blended with great perception and historical information on the person being discussed. This makes for a reading experience that feels like relaxed story-telling but is inadvertently and vastly educational. Since it is all factual and biographical, American Sketches is a study in personal excellence, charisma, and individual charm. As the book comes to a close, we read an inspiring series of articles on Louisiana and its commitment to overcoming the tragedy of Katrina. One of most entertaining chapters is the transcript of the Woody Allen interview. The writing style is journalistic by experienced editor and author Walter Isaacson, a master of the genre and an ideal choice for a book of this type. His prose is accessible without being folksy, concise without excessive truncation, yet intellectual without falling into the bourgeoisie trappings of elitism. The book has stylized writing that remains informative and energetic regardless of the topic. Most importantly is the remarkable ability to teach without sounding preachy and to inform without being pedantic. Embracing the historical lessons of the past and recognizing the amazing advances of the technological world of today, the author weaves a broad philosophical spirit through the achievements of individuals. Readers need to know that some of the information within the book is available from other sources--biographies, Time magazine--and that there is some redundancy particularly in the Einstein chapters. In addition, the emphases on tolerance and general acceptance could be interpreted by some as being somewhat liberal, making a few readers categorize the book as a liberal expression of the current political media. Aside from these possible criticisms, it is an entertaining read highly recommended for anyone interested in American leadership, personality dissection of famous people, and the contributions that make our lives complete today. Regrettably the book is rather brief and avoids an indepth loo

A revealing mosaic of what might be described as modern American liberalism

In a career that has spanned more than a generation and has taken him from his early days as a city hall beat reporter in his native New Orleans to the pinnacle of American journalism as managing editor of Time magazine and then Chairman and CEO of CNN, Walter Isaacson has occupied a unique vantage point from which to observe this period of American history. Along the way, he has found time to produce critically-praised and popular biographies of Henry Kissinger, Benjamin Franklin and Albert Einstein. Now in AMERICAN SKETCHES, Isaacson collects some 40 examples of his writing, from personal essays to reviews to pieces culled from Time that, taken together, construct a revealing mosaic of what might be described as modern American liberalism. Anything but a dewy-eyed idealist (he jokes that his fellow liberals "are congenitally more comfortable humming the theme of All Things Considered than the theme of Crossfire"), Isaacson is insistent that liberal values, such as the free exchange of ideas, pluralism and rational, evidence-based decision making, are crucial to America's well-being. Above all, he concludes that "the need to calibrate a proper balance among opposing principles is evident in every issue we face today, from abortion to health-care reform to affirmative action." A sizable cross section of the book is devoted to writings on his three biographical subjects, each subtly disclosing a different aspect of this worldview. He lauds Benjamin Franklin as a paragon of the American virtue of compromise, even going so far as to find a healthy dose of that quality embodied in our current president. For anyone who hasn't read Isaacson's exhaustive biography of Albert Einstein, the six pieces here, including ones discussing Einstein's view of God, his indirect but critical role in the development of the atomic bomb, and the essay introducing him as Time's "Man of the Century" make a persuasive case for his unabashed admiration of the brilliant scientist and humanist. Though he's quick to spotlight Henry Kissinger's faults, Isaacson's pragmatic outlook on American foreign policy comes through in his grudging admiration for the former secretary of state's brand of realpolitik. Whether it's new media or biotech, Isaacson is an enthusiast about emerging technologies, and among the five pieces in a section entitled "The Age of Technology," he offers a substantial, balanced appraisal of Bill Gates along with a profile of his equally tough-minded competitor, Andrew Grove of Intel. Although he has chosen to present the piece in the section "Journalism," Isaacson argues convincingly and from the point of view of one immersed in the world of print journalism for a new system that will allow online media to evolve from what he believes is a failed advertising model to one based on readers paying modest sums for content --- what he calls "micropayments." In any volume of this size and diversity, there are bound to be a handful of ill-chosen entries. The p

What A Great Listen!

Cotter Smith brings these unabridged Walter Isaacson essays to life. Ronald Reagan, Ben Franklin, Bill Gates,Woody Allen, Henry Kissinger, Clintons, Mikhail Gorbachev, and of course Albert Einstein (his pick for person of the century for surprising reasons!). It would be a great audiobook for just these essays. But Isaacson takes us through his journalistic journey from small town reporter to CEO of CNN and managing editor of Time magazine. What a wonderful trek through the current history of America and his final thoughts on where journalism and the internet intersect will make you pause and reflect. This is a perfect "around town" audiobook as each essay and reflection is in very manageable listening chapters (but you definitely will want more of each). My audiobook listening "posse" will be craving this puppy.
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