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Book Description
At a time when we are once again talking and thinking about the meaning of America, bestselling author and award-winning journalist Dan Rather provides a powerful look at Americans who struggle to achieve their desires and ambitions. With the stories of ordinary men and women accomplishing the extraordinary, Rather demonstrates how the American dream brings us together and guides us, as it has for more than 200 years.
For some, the American dream is simply to own a home or rise out of poverty. Some wish to serve God, country, or community. There are those who want to learn to read or run their own business. Still others simply wish to exercise fundamental American rights: to openly practice their religion and to speak what is in their minds and hearts.
Stirring and provocative, The American Dream illustrates that the basic American desire for "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" is alive and well. It also confirms what our founding fathers always believed: that we are a country of visionaries, in ways big and small.
Amazon.com
Despite years of reporting on tragedies around the world, Dan Rather is clearly an optimist. His take on the American dream, as personified by more than 30 Americans, is an inspiring reminder that the ideals the nation was founded upon are still alive and well. Rather first looked at how Americans pursued the American dream in a yearlong feature for his CBS Evening News show. His book takes off where the series ended, with more in-depth stories of those successfully pursuing their version of the dream.
Nosrat Scott came to the U.S. in search of freedom of religion. She was so persecuted for her Bah'ai faith in Iran that she was moved to tears when she realized she could speak openly of her religion in her English-as-a-second-language class. For many, of course, the American dream is all about making it rich. Some traveled long distances only to be surprised by fortune, such as Trung Dung, who escaped Vietnam at the age of 17 and became a multimillionaire with his Internet start-up company. There are those who covet the pursuit of happiness as an end in itself, such as the couple who gave up their high-paying jobs in Southern California to move to a small town in Oregon in order to meet their "not rich criteria"--that is, time for family and community. And there are those who have to swallow their pride to get there, like the chef from Georgia who learned to read at age 26. Other dreams are organized under the headings of fame, family, innovation, and service, which could just as easily have been titled the pursuit of justice.
There are few recognizable names here, but the stories of these everyday heroes are a spirited antidote to a creeping national cynicism and a vigorous challenge to seize on the opportunities--and responsibilities--that the dream implies.
--Lesley Reed
From Publishers Weekly
Inspired by Rather's radio and television series on the same subject, this collection features short biographies on almost entirely new subjects who in some way exemplify what Rather considers the founding ideals of the U.S. While Rather (Deadlines & Datelines) touches on his own story of growing up poor in rural Texas and rising to fame and fortune, the characters here are, for the most part, unknown except to those whose lives they have affected. There is no denying the power of their stories: people fleeing persecution from other governments, fighting injustice at the hands of this government or overcoming socioeconomic obstacles to achieve their goals. But the mawkish treatment that Rather gives them, along with his florid, often cloying introductions, lends the whole project a contrived air. Though drum and fife would hardly seem out of place in spots, the production thankfully leaves everything to Rather's trusted, folksy inflection. It's all undergone such a thorough Hollywood job, though, that the subjects themselves, purportedly everyday, down-to-earth paragons of our country's virtues, end up as glossy packages of pre-fab emotion. Simultaneous release with Morrow hardcover (Forecasts, Apr. 16).
From Library Journal
Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness the American dream. What exactly does that mean? Rather, award-winning broadcast journalist and anchor of CBS Evening News and 48 Hours, delves into the many incarnations of today's dream. Maybe it's raising a family, or striving for the career that you've always wanted, or enriching your life through education. It could be as simple as a change of lifestyle that comes with moving from one country to the next. Success and the realization of the American dream all appear to contain common characteristics: hard work, dedication, and a vision of the future. These themes are illustrated here in vivid detail. The tales, focusing on a range of people from migrant workers to professional athletes, resonate with the hopes and aspirations of a people, of a nation. Read superlatively by Rather himself, this program is highly recommended. Marty D. Evensvold, Arkansas City P.L., KS
From Booklist
Fans of Rather's CBS Evening News will find the title of his latest volume familiar: for two years, CBS Evening News has frequently included feature reports called "The American Dream." Rather uses the same title for some of his CBS radio commentaries. The justification for shifting this multimedia reportage to print is the fact that both TV and radio "present the intractable problem of time." In this book, Rather can tell more stories of individual Americans and their dreams--only one of the subjects here has also been covered on TV--and can spend more time examining how their dreams "fit into the larger currents of the American Dream." Rather groups his material into chapters that focus on elements of our national aspirations: liberty, enterprise, pursuit of happiness, family, fame, education, innovation, and "giving back." The Americans that Rather describes are a diverse group but, he urges, their stories are an inspirational reminder of the power of the nation's fundamental ideas to motivate a wide range of people.
Mary Carroll
From AudioFile
Following in the footsteps of Peter Jennings and Tom Brokaw, CBS News Anchor Dan Rather reads his profiles of people from all walks of life hoping to achieve success in America. The book defines how the dream differs among us and reveals that freedom of opportunity is far from dead. Overall, this is an uplifting book, which offers cynics pause to reflect about where we came from and where we're going as we overcome the problems that plague America. Rather's narration is natural and understated, similar in tone to his on-air style, and true to his persona. J.L.
Book Dimension
length: (cm)20.3 width:(cm)13.5
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我必须承认,这本书的语言风格是极其具有个人色彩的,它不像传统小说那样流畅地引导你前进,而是充满了大量的插入语、哲学性的反思和对日常语言的解构与重组。有时候,句子会突然拉长到一页纸的长度,充满了从句和复杂的主谓结构,仿佛在模仿意识流的奔涌。这使得阅读过程变成了一种积极的、需要高度参与的“解码”过程。我尤其欣赏作者对“沉默”的运用,有些最重要的信息,并非通过对话传达,而是通过角色间刻意的回避、不自然的停顿和反复摩挲的物件来暗示。这要求读者必须具备极高的情商和语境理解能力。这本书的真正力量在于它对“渴望”本身进行了深刻的质疑——我们渴望的究竟是目标本身,还是我们为了达成目标而进行的“表演”?它像一个技艺高超的魔术师,让你专注于他手中抛出的亮晶晶的道具,却忘记了真正的秘密藏在魔术师的袖口里,藏在那些我们不愿提及的、私密的、难以言说的部分。这绝对是一本需要静下心来,反复品读才能体会其深意的杰作。
评分这本书,坦率地说,让我感到一种近乎窒息的真实感。它没有给我那种好莱坞式的、镀金的希望,而是像一面粗粝的镜子,映照出那些被宏大叙事掩盖的日常挣扎。我尤其欣赏作者处理人物内心冲突的方式,那种微妙的、几乎无法言喻的焦虑感,像藤蔓一样缠绕着每一个试图向上爬升的角色。故事的节奏把握得极好,前三分之一部分像一场缓慢酝酿的暴风雨,压抑、沉重,让你几乎喘不过气来,而当真正的高潮来临时,那种爆发力是毁灭性的,却又带着一种令人心碎的必然性。我反复咀嚼了书中关于“机遇”的定义那几章,作者似乎在暗示,我们所追逐的那个光环,往往只是他人制造的幻象。它迫使你去审视自己的人生轨迹,你为之奋斗的那些目标,究竟是源于内心的渴望,还是社会强加的期待?读完后,我很久没有放下书,只是盯着天花板,脑海里回荡的不是情节本身,而是那种被剥离了所有虚饰后的、赤裸裸的生存状态。这是一种深刻的体验,远超一般的消遣读物,它更像是一次对现代性焦虑的深度剖析。
评分这本书的叙事视角非常独特,它采取了一种近乎于舞台剧的“多声部合唱”模式,每隔几章,我们就必须跳入一个全新的、看似无关紧要的小人物的内心世界。起初我有些困惑,因为这些支线人物的命运似乎与主线故事相去甚远,但随着阅读的深入,作者巧妙地展示了他们是如何像水滴一样,汇聚成一股不可阻挡的社会洪流。我被其中一段关于“身份建构”的独白深深震撼了——那个角色试图用购买昂贵的、象征性的物品来填补内心的空虚,那种努力维持的体面,反而成了最可悲的注脚。这本书的魅力在于它的“无中心化”,它拒绝提供一个明确的英雄或道德指南,而是让你在迷雾中自行摸索意义。它更像是一部社会学田野调查报告,只是披上了一层极具文学性的外衣。读完后,我忍不住上网搜索了书中涉及的一些地理位置和历史事件,发现作者的虚构是建立在极其扎实的现实基础之上的,这使得故事的说服力达到了一个惊人的高度。
评分说实话,这本书的基调让我感到彻骨的寒冷,但这种寒冷却是令人上瘾的。它完全抛弃了任何温情脉脉的元素,人物关系的处理如同冰冷的机器零件,相互咬合,精确,但绝不产生任何多余的摩擦或情感溢出。我尤其欣赏作者对“失败”的描绘,那不是戏剧化的崩溃,而是一种缓慢的、侵蚀性的、由无数微小决策累积而成的必然结果。书中那个关于继承和断裂的隐喻,简直是神来之笔,它跨越了时间,让不同代际的困境产生了惊人的共鸣。我甚至能闻到那种陈旧的书房里,旧皮革和灰尘混合在一起的味道。文字的密度非常高,每一个形容词都经过了千锤百炼,没有一个字是多余的。读到最后,你不会感到释然,只会感到一种清醒的、无可奈何的清醒——有些局已经写死了,无论你怎么努力,棋盘上的格局早已被设定。这种对宿命论的艺术化表达,是这本书最锋利的地方。
评分阅读体验简直是一场智力上的马拉松,作者的语言风格极其洗练,充满了后现代主义的疏离感和精准的社会观察力。如果说有些小说是用情感来打动人,那么这本书则是用精确的解剖刀,一丝不苟地剖开社会结构中的那些裂痕。我特别着迷于其叙事结构上的大胆创新——它频繁地在第一人称的个人回忆和第三人称近乎百科全书式的宏观描述之间切换,这种跳跃性非但没有造成阅读障碍,反而营造出一种后设的、戏仿的意味。书中对特定城市景观和阶层符号的描绘,细致到令人发指,仿佛每一扇紧闭的门后都隐藏着一个尚未被揭露的经济学寓言。我需要时不时停下来,查阅一些作者提及的社会学术语,这无疑增加了阅读的门槛,但回报是巨大的。它不是一本让你轻松入眠的书,更像是一份需要被反复研读的文献,你必须全神贯注,才能跟上作者那飞速运转的思维列车,理解他如何将微小的个体命运编织进庞大而冷漠的系统图景之中。
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