Rating:  Summary: Wake up and smell the truth. Review: "A People's History of the United States" forever changed the way I viewed the world and the system I grew up in. Continuing that tradition, "The Zinn Reader..", wakes up a desire in one's soul to rise up and do something about the injustices and hypocrisies that have dominated our past and continued to swallow our present. Professor Zinn write clearly, honestly, and furiously about topics ranging from the distribution of wealth to the ideal uses of scholarship and intellectualism. He lacks no emotion or fury, unlike many other historians. The main challenge Zinn makes it to exercise free thought, and "to be skeptical of someone else's reality." Very few historians, or writers for that matter, dare to look at the world from the perspective of the poor, the disenfranchised, the bombed, the murdered, the jailed, the conquered, the victim, but Zinn does exactly that, and in doing so puts out a masterful collection that not only instructs us in History, but also challenges our humanity and our place in the world.
Rating:  Summary: From start to finish -- a page turner. Review: How many times can you call a collection of political essays a page turner? Well, how many Howard Zinn books are there? This is a really comprehensive collection of Zinn's work, and makes a nice compliment to his quintessential "People's History of the US." It picks up on the same subject matter, but in Zinn's voice as an observer to the great political struggles of this century. It is, of course, typical, liberal, activist-minded Zinn, but I view this as a good thing -- he has a great deal of perspective as both an academic and an activist. As for my favorite parts...I was interested and impressed to read of Zinn's activism during the Civil Rights Movement. This is a great first-hand account from someone who was along for the ride. I also enjoy his discussion of pacifism in the context of WWII, which is a difficult and delicate subject to tackle. I respect that he attempts to explain his anti-war beliefs with respect to this "good war." I have found this book useful in very practical ways as well. I used some essays as texts in the activist internship class I taught, and I also referenced the list of important and influential books Zinn includes in an appendix.
Rating:  Summary: From start to finish -- a page turner. Review: How many times can you call a collection of political essays a page turner? Well, how many Howard Zinn books are there? This is a really comprehensive collection of Zinn's work, and makes a nice compliment to his quintessential "People's History of the US." It picks up on the same subject matter, but in Zinn's voice as an observer to the great political struggles of this century. It is, of course, typical, liberal, activist-minded Zinn, but I view this as a good thing -- he has a great deal of perspective as both an academic and an activist. As for my favorite parts...I was interested and impressed to read of Zinn's activism during the Civil Rights Movement. This is a great first-hand account from someone who was along for the ride. I also enjoy his discussion of pacifism in the context of WWII, which is a difficult and delicate subject to tackle. I respect that he attempts to explain his anti-war beliefs with respect to this "good war." I have found this book useful in very practical ways as well. I used some essays as texts in the activist internship class I taught, and I also referenced the list of important and influential books Zinn includes in an appendix.
Rating:  Summary: A wonderful anthology of our greatest historian. Review: Howard Zinn is an eloquent but plain spoken writer. His essays are a joy to read, something that cannot be said of so many historians. This is in part because, Zinn is not afraid to admit that he is an interpreter of events, he colors his writings with his own ideals, interprets the past in light of what he has lived through, illuminating events and the lives of people who may have otherwise been forgotten, so that we can learn something of ourselves in their stories. Zinn's writings on events of the twentieth century are special in that he has participated in so many important historical movements, from being a WWII bombardier, to teaching in an all black girls' college during the civil rights movement, through protesting the Vietnam War and beyond. He is not afraid to state his beliefs, but is never condescending. He is a believer in the spirit of humanity, in spite of all the atrocities he has seen and studied. This massive collection spans many years and many topics. There is not an uninteresting essay in the nearly 700 pages, though, making this quite a bargain at that. Don't pass this book up. Even if you don't consider yourself of the "leftist" persuasion, I think you will find Zinn's writings very engaging and enjoyable. I hope you do.
Rating:  Summary: A wonderful anthology of our greatest historian. Review: Howard Zinn is an eloquent but plain spoken writer. His essays are a joy to read, something that cannot be said of so many historians. This is in part because, Zinn is not afraid to admit that he is an interpreter of events, he colors his writings with his own ideals, interprets the past in light of what he has lived through, illuminating events and the lives of people who may have otherwise been forgotten, so that we can learn something of ourselves in their stories. Zinn's writings on events of the twentieth century are special in that he has participated in so many important historical movements, from being a WWII bombardier, to teaching in an all black girls' college during the civil rights movement, through protesting the Vietnam War and beyond. He is not afraid to state his beliefs, but is never condescending. He is a believer in the spirit of humanity, in spite of all the atrocities he has seen and studied. This massive collection spans many years and many topics. There is not an uninteresting essay in the nearly 700 pages, though, making this quite a bargain at that. Don't pass this book up. Even if you don't consider yourself of the "leftist" persuasion, I think you will find Zinn's writings very engaging and enjoyable. I hope you do.
Rating:  Summary: wonderful, and moving Review: I first checked out "The Zinn Reader" this past summer because my senior high-school history teacher had us read some Zinn for a final paper. Thank God she had us read that. The Zinn Reader has changed, or at least re-enforced, ideas that i have long held about several topics. While Zinn is not infallible, the ideas are splendid, and wonderful to see in print. Big book, but you don't have to go straight through...pick which essays interst you. you won't regret it
Rating:  Summary: The truth will set you free Review: If A Peoples History left you hungry this should help. When you free your mind revolution is possible.
Rating:  Summary: Excellent book. Review: If Josef Goebbels were alive today (one assumes that he is gone; check the roster of the World Anti-Communist League to be certain), he might be moved to explain, "Whenever I hear the name 'Howard Zinn,' I reach for my revolver." Professor Zinn may have outlived his usefulness in a time when a certain not-so-special prosecutor can proclaim, with a straight face, that "the First Amendment is about truth." Unless, of course, there remain a few die-hard Americans who reserve the rights to think freely, reject propaganda masquerading as history, and refute the notion of ownership of ideas. The most common side-effect brought on by reading Howard Zinn is a profound, disquieting loss of equilibrium: All these years history has been so ... unbalanced. Without a thorough and, as I'm sure the author would demand, critical reading of the Zinn oeuvre (as neatly collected in this handsome volume), you simply cannot enjoy a meaningful appreciation of American history in the 20th century. Period.
Rating:  Summary: Simply Perfect Review: If you like Zinn then you must read this. Tells us what democracy is really about.
Rating:  Summary: And It Makes Me Wonder... Review: Why wasn't I told this earlier? How come I must pain myself to find the truth? Why are there so few books such as this? Why aren't more men and women revealing the actualities? Why all the subversions? Be willing to alter your vision of the world.
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