From Publishers Weekly Millenniumism is upon us: the editors of Time magazine and CBS News have amassed an engaging, if mostly predictable, overview of the most important women and men of the past century. Though there are a few questionable choices (why, for example, is Pope John Paul II included, when John XXIII is not? Why does Richard Rodgers make an appearance here and not George Gershwin? Where is D.W. Griffith? Elvis? Frank Lloyd Wright?), generally the selections make senseAeven Bart Simpson as Number 99. The writing and opinions mostly range from the reverent (William F. Buckley on Pope John Paul II or Peter Gay on Sigmund Freud) to the fawning (Peggy Noonan on Ronald Reagan). But every now and then the collection offers a pleasant surprise: Salman Rushdie presents an unromantic view of Mohandas Gandhi and Indian history that is filled with surprising facts; Reeve Lindbergh deals forthrightly and honestly with the isolationist and anti-Semitic views of her father, Charles Lindbergh. Other entries avoid the thorny issues: Lee Iacocca downplays Henry Ford's anti-Semitism and his union busting, although Iacocca's view is balanced somewhat by Irving Bluestone's astute piece on Walter Reuther, which features a photograph of the labor leader bloodied by Ford's goons. Lavishly illustrated, this is a fin de si?cle coffee-table book, but not a comprehensive history. (Nov.) Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Kirkus Reviews This gracious, though seriously unbalanced, farewell to the departing century presents biographical sketches of 100 political leaders, artists, scientists, and tycoons who left an indelible mark on the modern age. The price some figures had to pay for the honor of inclusion was to share space with their nemeses. Freud, Hitler, Einstein, Mao, Sakharov, Lenin, Anne Frank, Ayatullah Khomeini, the Beatles, and others become strange bedfellows in a volume distinguished at once by literary refinement (its contributors include Elie Wiesel, Harold Bloom, and Amos Oz) and occasional stylistic infelicities and ideologically biased evaluations. Russian storyteller Tatyana Tolstaya offers a syrupy endorsement of Gorbachev, the man who failed in both communism and democracy, contending that although Gorbachev was not ``particularly honest, fair, or noble, he deserves love and respect because his successors turned out much worse. By contrast, Salman Rushdie's re-evaluation of the ``ambiguous nature of [Gandhi's] achievement and legacy'' is remarkably balanced, as it strips a major 20th-century icon of his immunity to criticism and considers both the grandeur of his teachings and their unresponsiveness to the needs of India and the world at large. Despite David Gelernter's attempts to portray Bill Gates as a mere ``technological groupie'' with a single talent ``for being at the right place at the right time, Gates is the only person to claim space here as both subject and author, praising the Wright Brothers in his own essay for building the first superhighway in the sky. The collections obvious drawbacks are its marked Amer-Eurocentrism and its blind optimism about the world entering ``the third millenium as a wiser place. Perhaps Bart Simpson should have been memorialized along with Gagarin, Chagall, and Fellini. Its geographical and cultural bias makes this a peculiarly parochial valediction to the departing century. (Photos) -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. See all Editorial Reviews
评分
评分
评分
评分
我必须指出,这本书在细节的考据上达到了近乎偏执的程度,这让它区别于市面上许多浮光掠影的名人荟萃录。每一个章节的背后,都仿佛能看到堆积如山的原始资料和跨学科的研究成果。然而,尽管内容厚重,行文风格却异常流畅,丝毫没有学术论文的枯燥感。作者运用了大量的历史场景重现和对话模拟,将我们直接拉回到那些决定性的瞬间——无论是高层会议的剑拔弩张,还是实验室里灵光乍现的刹那。这种强烈的沉浸感,使得阅读体验远超一般的历史读物。更难能可贵的是,它巧妙地平衡了宏大叙事与个人悲喜,你既能感受到世界格局的剧烈变动,也能体会到那些站在时代风口浪尖的人所承受的巨大心理压力,有时候是荣耀,更多时候是孤独。它不提供简单的答案,而是提供了一套观察历史的成熟工具和视角,对于任何希望深入理解近现代世界形成逻辑的读者来说,这本书都是一座无法绕开的里程碑。
评分这本书的叙事节奏掌控得极其精妙,它没有采用那种平铺直叙、流水账式的编年体写法,而是通过人物之间的隐秘联系和主题的交织,构建起了一张精密的网。你会发现,某个科学家的突破,是如何在无形中催生了某个政治家的政策转向,而那位艺术家的反叛精神,又如何为下一代的社会运动埋下了火种。这种“蝴蝶效应”式的历史观,让人在阅读时始终保持着高度的警觉和兴奋感,生怕错过任何一个细微的因果关联。它真正做到了将“人”置于“历史”的中心,而不是将人视为历史的工具。对于每一个传记对象,作者都投入了大量的笔墨去描绘他们的内心世界和外部环境的张力,使得这些“百年风云人物”不再是教科书上冰冷的符号,而是活生生的、充满热望与局限的个体。它鼓励读者去思考,如果没有这样一个人,历史的走向是否会发生哪怕是微小的偏离。这种对个体能动性的肯定,在这部巨著中得到了淋漓尽致的体现,读起来酣畅淋漓,充满思辨的乐趣。
评分这部宏大的叙事史诗,简直就是一幅跨越百年风云变幻的壮丽画卷,它没有聚焦于某个单一的事件或思想流派,而是巧妙地将镜头对准了那些在历史的巨轮中扮演了关键角色的个体。阅读的过程就像是进行了一次深入的、高强度的时空穿梭,从工业革命的余晖到信息时代的黎明,每一个被选中的人物都像是历史长河中的一个重要航标。作者在选择人物时展现出的那种近乎苛刻的平衡感令人印象深刻——权力中心的政治家、颠覆性的科学家、开创性的艺术家,甚至包括那些默默无闻却深刻影响了社会结构的无名英雄,他们共同构筑了一个无比复杂却又逻辑严谨的人类群像。我尤其欣赏它处理历史复杂性的手法,没有简单地将人物脸谱化为“好人”或“坏人”,而是深入挖掘了他们在特定历史语境下的挣扎、矛盾与抉择,那种灰色地带的描绘,才真正抓住了人性的本质。读完之后,你不会觉得你只是读了一堆传记,而更像是完成了一场对“何以为人,何以为时代”的深度哲学探讨,它要求你不仅要记住名字和事迹,更要理解他们行为背后的时代驱动力和心理动机。
评分坦率地说,刚拿到这本砖头书时,我曾担心内容会过于精英化或受限于特定的文化视角,但很快我的担忧就被打消了。这本书展现出了一种罕见的全球化视野,它并没有将目光仅仅锁定在传统意义上的“西方中心”,而是努力搜寻那些来自不同大洲、不同文化背景却拥有世界级影响力的人物。这种包容性使得整部作品的论述更具普适性和说服力。阅读过程中,我经常被那些不熟悉的名字所吸引,并被作者清晰而富有洞察力的分析所折服,这些人物的事迹极大地拓宽了我对“影响世界”这一概念的理解边界。它教会我,真正的变革往往不是由一个超级英雄完成的,而是由无数个在不同领域默默耕耘,最终汇聚成一股不可阻挡的洪流的个体共同塑造的。这本书的价值,就在于它成功地将这些分散的星辰,通过精妙的笔触,描绘成了一幅完整的、令人震撼的“人类群星闪耀时”的星图。
评分这本书最令人难忘的特点,在于它对“历史的偶然性与必然性”进行了深刻的探讨。它没有把这些人物塑造成历史必然性的产物,而是不断强调,在关键的历史节点,一个人的意志、一个错误的决定,或者一个天才的顿悟,都可能将历史的车轮引向一个完全不同的方向。作者仿佛在我们耳边低语,每一个被我们视为“定局”的历史结果,背后都曾是无数次未曾发生的可能性的较量。这种对历史辩证法的细腻处理,使得阅读体验充满了一种智力上的挑衅。它迫使读者跳出既定的历史框架,以一种更加灵活和批判性的眼光去审视我们所处的现代社会是如何一步步被这些世纪人物的行动所塑造。它不是一本用来炫耀知识的工具书,而是一面反思我们自身时代局限性的镜子,其深度和广度,绝对称得上是世纪性的阅读体验。
评分 评分 评分 评分 评分本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2026 qciss.net All Rights Reserved. 小哈图书下载中心 版权所有