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Hardcover Right Turns: Unconventional Lessons from a Controversial Life Book

ISBN: 1400051878

ISBN13: 9781400051878

Right Turns: Unconventional Lessons from a Controversial Life

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

In this candid, captivating memoir that says a lot about the unpredictable interplay of the personal and the political, the author recounts his journey from secularism to religion, from adventurous... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

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Arrived on time Interesting

Definitely the Mensch!

Thank God for Michael Medved and his insight. As a Medhead myself, I love his witty style, clear intellect and humility. This book gives the reader an intimate look into the life of a very entertaining public figure who affects our world for the better; truly living into his calling to ensure that people realize there is indeed hope for the future. One of the best nuggets that I took from this book were in regard to the Scarlet Plague and his Uncle Moish's warnings about where the Scarlet Plague is found. The other great nugget, is in regard to the amount of time we American invest (need I say WASTE) in the consumption of popular culture. Thanks to seeing Michael Medved live at Grove City College in April 2005 and after reading this book, my husband and I KILLED our TV. Well, at least we got rid of cable tv (saving money was a nice bonus) and now we have found so much more time! It's amazing what an impact the media really does have on our lives if we let it. Thank you Michael Medved for alerting us!

Insightful Read, Hard to Put Down

I thoroughly enjoyed "Right Turns." I enjoyed his take on politics, romance, and religion. I have listened to Medved on the radio for many years and it was enjoyable to have this book tie all of the pieces of his life together. A must read, Medved fan or not!

Right Turns , The Life of Michael Medved

The humor , insight to famous people, Hillary he knew in college, and his weird behaviors, will stop the family car to pick up trash on the road side , makes this book just roll along . Michael Medved is one of those walking talking Encylopedia's, he knows his facts. He presents them in a very interesing and logical manner . Great insights into the movie industry , politics and tactics from the left and right , and a beautiful portrayal of how religion can change a person's heart for the better and change how they view the world . Great book , easy rading , I loved it .

An American conservative journey

Even if you don't like Michael Medved, even if you are liberal, there is a lot to like in this book, the story of one man's interesting, eventful journey from the left wing to the right side of American political and cultural thought. Perhaps most enjoyable are the folksy, down-to-earth detail of Medved's evolution, from his family's roots in Ukraine (his grandmother's fourteen-year separation from his grandfather alone is worthy of a Hollywood script), to early years in Philadelphia with a doting aunt, to his transformation to life in southern California, to high school in a sun-drenched Los Angeles suburb, to an extended stay at Yale (hitchhiking 80,000 miles before he graduated; there's a book right there), to political campaigns (from Bobby Kennedy to George McGovern to Ron Dellums), through the turbulent war protest years, and on through his conversion to conservative thought (having been mugged, or at least robbed, by reality in "Beserkly", this is an engaging, informative, enjoyable read. The book is especially dear to men of Medved's generation, who came of age in the sixties, had tough experiences in the seventies, and came around in the eighties. His brief chapters have almost cute, provocative titles and an eye and memory for detail, be it a ride with a friend back from northern Calfornia that led to his best-selling story about his high school classmates, to specific memories of week end jaunts with his sleeping bag, to an almost Forrest Gump-like luck of being in the right place at the right time to meet, among others, John Kerry, Hillary Clinton, Barbra Streisand, and Medved's second wife. Embraced by conservative Christians, Medved earlier embraced his Orthodox Judaism, while swimming in a Hollywood culture of reformed, liberal, and left-wing personalities, trying to make a constructive cultural statement and stance out of the deteriorating drek flowing from Tinseltown. How he not only survived but how he consciously changed and thrived as a best-selling author, public speaker, and popular (two million people a week listen) talk show host, is a real American journey. One minor error: In a funny story about trying to NOT receive a job offer at a Wisconsin regional university, Medved (p. 222) places Menomonie, Wisconsin 90 minutes west of Minneapolis, when the Stout campus and the city are east of the Twin Cities.

Part biography, part homily, all Medved

I have four main reasons for liking this book. (1) I like Michael Medved. He's a personable, decent, and intelligent guy; his biography is interesting because he himself is. (2) Having never been a leftie myself, I enjoy reading accounts by ex-lefties about how they came around to good sense. (And accounts by formerly secular-leftist Jews about how they returned to traditional observance. Medved is good buddies with Rabbi Daniel Lapin, author of _America's Real War_.) (3) I _dis_agree with Medved often enough (he didn't like the first _Batman_ film!) that his book illustrates an important point: despite what you may have heard, the political right is as intellectually diverse as the left. (4) Medved seems to have been present, albeit in the background, at nearly every important sociopolitical event of the last four decades. It's like _Forrest Gump_ for conservatives. Heck, he was at Yale with Bush, Kerry, Clinton, and Rodham; his personal accounts of those folks alone are worth reading whether you care about Medved himself or not. The book itself is arranged into thirty-five 'lessons', each of which is part biography, part homily. For example, Medved launches his tale with an account of his grandparents' immigration to the U.S., but rather than just presenting biographical details, he ties it in with a short account of why he thinks the existence of the United States is divinely providential. This pattern continues throughout the book, with some chapters heavier on the biography and others almost all homiletic. There's lots of interesting stuff packed into the cracks. You'll find out, e.g., just exactly _which_ film mentioned in _The Golden Turkey Awards_ was actually a hoax. Medved is, of course, a well-known film critic who thinks (with good reason) that 'Hollyweird' has lost touch with American values and produces films primary to satisfy left-leaning anti-American/anti-religious critics rather than to make money. If you want to know more about his opinions, look up his online columns and read his _Hollywood vs. America_, which I reviewed some years ago.
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