Home :: Books :: Biographies & Memoirs  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs

Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Reason for Hope : A Spiritual Journey

Reason for Hope : A Spiritual Journey

List Price: $32.00
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great
Review: She has such an wonderful way of presenting herself and her ideas. She is the opposite of arrogance!
I like the way this reviewer put it:

"Jane made an amazing and commendable effort to be honest and humble with her readers, sharing her deepest and seemingly most private thoughts, which all have played a part in shaping her life and character. anyone will appreciate this book, be they from a scientific, animal welfare, spiritual or casual background."

She is not boastful, but sticks to her points. Her honesty reminds me of my father's honesty about life.


Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Mystic moments in an engaging memoir
Review: To describe an intimate mystical experience so clearly that the reader can virtually participate in it -- this is a truly rare gift! Jane Goodall possesses the ability to take you right into her moments of vision, glimpses of spiritual realities. For me, these are the unforgettable highlights of her memoir. The story of her childhood, adolescence and young adulthood is enchanting, as a portrait of an essentially normal and loving, supportive family (why is that so unusual in autobiographies!?). I would have liked to learn more of how and why her marriage dissolved, but Goodall chooses to veil that part of her life in privacy.

The final chapters of the book are somewhat less interesting, dealing with fairly well-known information about the serious conditions on the planet. Jane Goodall probably deserves to feel like a saint if anyone does, but it was a little off-putting to sense the halo in her self-image. She recommends that we all become "saints" in saving the earth and its creatures, even in such simple ways as turning off the lights we don't need (it makes me smile to feel like a saint as I flip a switch). This is one of the most engaging memoirs I've read. It seems particularly appropriate for the teenager and young adult reader, showing how a unique life path can develop from seemingly random events and the simple faith to step into the unknown.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A DIFFERENT APPROACH
Review: When it comes to issues concerning animals and the environment, most people have a hard time staying cool. But from the minute I heard Jane Goodall speak back in my freshman year of college, to the second I finished reading this book, I knew that I?d found a new role model?A gentle, contemplative, and fiercely intelligent role model.

It?s Jane Goodall?s calm, sensitive approach to effecting change that made her life extraordinary, and made Reason for Hope a pleasure to read. In this book she tells a story, woven with memories, lessons learned, and quiet introspection.

From her blissful youth overshadowed by World War II, to her peaceful days in Gombe surrounded by violence, Jane struggled to understand the sharp contrast between her life and those of others. Her compassion was not limited to people?it was amplified by her love of animals and appreciation for nature.

But you?ll never find Jane Goodall protesting on the streets. You?ll never find her raiding animal laboratories in the middle of the night and freeing its prisoners. Instead, you?ll see her chatting quietly with the ?bad guys,? sharing her experiences in such a humble and non-threatening way that they don?t even realize how much it?s changed the way they see things. Jane has the ability to take a step back and analyze her observations logically without losing sight of or being overcome by the emotions that started it all. She writes:

?Real change will come only from within; laws and regulations are useful, but sadly easy to flout. So I keep the anger?which of course I feel?as hidden and controlled as possible. I try to reach gently into their hearts? (p. 270)

This is what makes her unique among most of the scientists and activists we see today.

?Not that her story will resonate with everyone. Even I didn?t identify with some of her religious speculations, or the little poems scattered throughout the book. I was particularly put off by her call for a ?moral society,? driven by her belief that ?We will have to evolve, all of us, from ordinary, everyday human beings?into saints! Ordinary people, like you and me, will have to become saints, or at least mini-saints?? (p. 200). It?s not that I don?t believe it?s possible?I just don?t think turning 6 billion people into saints is the most effective way to go about doing things.

Then again, what I appreciate most about Jane Goodall is her approach, and not necessarily the beliefs that underlie them. In dealing with issues that are so often drenched with emotions, Jane Goodall remains an example of how to handle things both gracefully and objectively. This is something we could all stand to learn.



<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates