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Ben Bradlee Jr.

Teoksen The Kid: The Immortal Life of Ted Williams tekijä

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Tietoja tekijästä

Ben Bradlee Jr. graduated from Colby College. He served in the Peace Corps in Afghanistan from 1970-1972. When he returned to the United States in 1972, he went to work as a reporter for the Riverside (Calif.) Press-Enterprise, remaining there until mid-1975. He spent 25 years, from 1979 to 2004, näytä lisää with The Boston Globe as a reporter then an editor. As a deputy managing editor, he oversaw the Globe's Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage of the sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic Church and supervised the production of a book on the subject entitled Betrayal. He has written several books including The Ambush Murders, Prophet of Blood, Guts and Glory: The Rise and Fall of Oliver North, and The Kid: The Immortal Life of Ted Williams. (Bowker Author Biography) näytä vähemmän

Sisältää nimet: Ben Bradlee Jr., Ben Bradlee Jr.

Image credit: By Bill Brett - Email from photographer, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=44001917

Tekijän teokset

Merkitty avainsanalla

Yleistieto

Syntymäaika
1948-08-07
Sukupuoli
male
Kansalaisuus
USA
Syntymäpaikka
Manchester, New Hampshire, USA
Koulutus
Colby College
Ammatit
journalist
writer
Suhteet
Bradlee, Ben (father)
Organisaatiot
The Boston Globe

Jäseniä

Kirja-arvosteluja

This is a wonderful book for all of us who wondered how and why Donald Trump became president in 2016. The author visited Luzerne County in Pennsylvania, a blue county that went red for Trump in record numbers. Bradlee visited typical voters in that district to find out why, even those who traditionally voted Democrat, supported Trump. There are many lessons here for Democrats if they hope to build on their successes in the mid-terms of 2018 to retake the Senate and White House. Instead of simply running against Trump, they need to be able to tell the middle class what they will do for them on issues that really matter - taxes (not simply a tax cut for the rich as Trump did), health care, education, jobs, etc. I recommend this book for anyone who cares about the direction our country is moving in and for anyone who is contemplating running for office.… (lisätietoja)
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Susan.Macura | 1 muu arvostelu | Nov 22, 2018 |
The “Forgotten” Whites of Luzerne, PA Speak Up

Luzerne County in northeast Pennsylvania flipped for Donald Trump in the 2016 election. Nearly 6000 Democrats changed their registration so they could vote for him in the primary. The overwhelmingly Democrat county then gave Trump his biggest win in the state. Ben Bradlee Jr. went almost immediately to investigate why. He came back with the answer that Hillary Clinton made whites feel ashamed, while Donald Trump made them feel good about themselves. Bradlee lets them speak their minds in The Forgotten, a quick and easy read that makes it understandable.

The county used to be an incubator for the middle class. Coal was the first great booster, and when that faded, manufacturing sprung up to keep it all going. Wilkes-Barre, its largest city, topped out at a population of 90,000. Luzerne is mostly Catholic, with a strong and growing evangelical component. They get their news from Fox, Breitbart and Infowars.

The decline accelerated with company relocations to Mexico and China in the late 90s. With no jobs, property values plunged, to where good housing can be had for five figures - but no one wants any. The death rate from opioids is four times New York City’s, with an average age of death of 38. The crime rate is 50% higher than the Pennsylvania average. Guns are a non-controversial part of appearance.

Luzerne has been humiliated by scandals like Kids for Cash, in which judges sent juveniles to for-profit prisons for kickbacks. The population has also changed dramatically: it is now 52% Hispanic, mostly Dominican, the same as for Reading and Allentown nearby. Finally, Pennsylvania ranks fifth in the nation for the number of hate groups operating there, including the Ku Klux Klan in Wilkes-Barre, the county seat. Its population is now 40,000.

Bradlee spent several weeks roaming Luzerne, finding out who was who, and interviewing a dozen diverse white Trump voters in great depth. The chapters profile them, with a photo, the story of their thoughts leading up to the 2016 election and how they came be Trump voters, their family and career history, and how they see Trump now.

The common thread in Luzerne voters’ complaints is a lack of simplicity. They enjoy the simple, tweetable solutions, leveraged so well by Donald Trump (though several wish he wouldn’t tweet so much). They have no time for implications or unintended consequences. For example, Kim Woodrosky , a high school graduate, made herself into a successful landlord, tooling around her properties in her signature bright yellow Corvette. She has 65 apartments providing her a $90,000 annual income. She leases to the lowest end, Section 8 renters, people on welfare. But she complains bitterly about people getting something for nothing. “How is that fair?” she rails repeatedly. She pays taxes, and the money goes to welfare, she claims. Yet if Trump halts welfare, all her tenants will default. She will have to evict them, fall behind on her mortgage payments, and with no real estate market, be unable to sell them off. She will lose her buildings to foreclosure and file for bankruptcy herself. More than her tenants, Woodrosky lives nicely on welfare.

There is also a strong thread of rationalizing Trump. No one actually ignores all his lies (6.5 per day), his infidelities or his crassness. Instead, they have become apologists: “What he really meant was…” or “We’re all sinners” or “Do you know anybody who doesn’t curse?”, or “It’s refreshing.” So no matter what he says or does, he’s the best for them. And they can’t believe the whole country isn’t behind him as he remakes it in his own fantasy.

They absolve Trump of blame for not replacing Obamacare as promised numerous times. Even though he claimed to have his own plan that was far less expensive and offered far more benefits (“Believe me”), the Luzernians blame the Republican Party instead. They say it had seven years to come up with a better plan but didn’t. Even though the party was always against any health plan at all.

They all have unkind words for Hillary Clinton. She was either an unwanted extension of the vile Obama, a criminal in her own right, or an insult to the intelligence of women, who don’t want to be considered single-issue voters (a female president). So even if they couldn’t rationalize Trump, they would not even consider Clinton.

The Obama years weighed extra heavily as Luzerne deteriorated over the past decade. They say it was Obama who was “a degradation to the office”, not Trump. “He almost gave the impression he did not like America, apologizing for our exceptionalism, and I never understood why,” says Erik Olson, a war veteran. He likes Trump because he is not a politician, something strongly echoed throughout The Forgotten. They applaud his unorthodox approach to everything. That’s what they voted for, and they got it.

There is one rising star in Luzerne. Lou Barletta, the mayor of Hazleton until he landed a seat in Congress (on his third try), is now running against Bob Casey for the Senate. A seat of the pants successful entrepreneur and nice guy, he achieved fame in 2006 by trying to expel illegal immigrants from Hazleton, a decade before Trump came along. Barletta was key to Trump’s success in Pennsylvania, and Trump is the one who insisted he run for the Senate seat. He had offered Barletta Secretary of Housing, but Barletta preferred Transport, and so got left out of the cabinet. (Mitch McConnell’s wife, Elaine Chao, had dibs on Transport.)

Life has not changed in Luzerne, except that many people don’t talk to each other any more because of the Trump/Never Trump rift. They unfriend each other on facebook. Some warehouse businesses are starting up, thanks to Wilkes-Barre’s location at the intersection of Interstates 81 and 84, but the outlook is still grim, with blatant, overt crime at the top of everyone’s list. Followed close by immigrants/race, and gun rights.

Possibly the most important profile in the book is of Alia Habib – who left. She is not “white” according to whites, and she is not a Republican or a Trump supporter. Anyone with education and/or talent leaves, but Alia has analyzed it better than everyone else. Everything in Luzerne is measured through a race lens, she says. Growing up, she was classified “sand nigger” or “camel jockey” because of her name. When she moved to New York City, she was shocked that people thought her intelligent and attractive. She is now a literary agent, and pessimistic for the future of Luzerne, where negativity and support for Trump rule. “I don’t see the next four years will see the residents of Luzerne County better off, but I do think it will be even harder to live there – economically, socially, emotionally – if you number among one of the groups Trump scapegoated.”

Meanwhile, another woman profiled is thrilled that she wakes up “every morning and say to myself Donald Trump is our president so my day doesn’t get any better.”

David Wineberg
… (lisätietoja)
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DavidWineberg | 1 muu arvostelu | Aug 22, 2018 |
Very well written and researched.
 
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DCavin | 2 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Mar 30, 2018 |
Ted Williams was a great… and here is where the argument starts. “The Kid”, a name given Williams early in his career by an equipment manager, was a great team player, only out for himself, a horrible father, a man who loved his children, capable of great acts of humble generosity, egotistical, sexist, and the most foul mouthed son of a bitch ever to stride the earth. Far from settling any dispute, The Kid: The Immortal Life of Ted Williams by Ben Bradlee, Jr. determinedly collects every perspective and places all of them before the reader. Rather than a verdict, Bradlee seems interested only in an understanding of a great man.

I grew up in a home where the statement “I don’t care if another baseball ever crosses the sky” was expressed anytime baseball became the subject of conversation. My father’s generation had no southern team they could see play or root for, and football was the perpetual pinnacle sport, even for many in my generation. Professional baseball did not find its way south until 1966.

In 1975 I went to visit relatives in Boston, and that year the Red Sox took the Reds all the way to game 7 of the World Series before again being touched by the curse of The Babe. The remainder of the 1970’s saw the Patriots draft Stanley Morgan, Roland James, and other Tennessee Volunteers, and I adopted Boston as my favorite sports town. I was introduced to Ted Williams in the early 1980’s by John Updike’s essay on Williams final at bat. I’ve always been a sucker for mythology.

Over the years I would see him appear on David Letterman, Bob Costas, and other shows and be intrigued. The other thing that stood out to me was the reaction of real baseball fans to the mere mention of his name. Even Yankee fans respected and admired the talents of “Teddy Ballgame” and spoke of him in awe. I also learned of his service in the Marines, and not just in a uniform selling bonds, but with the stick of a plane in hand smack dab in the middle of harm’s way. There was from time to time a less than flattering image of Ted that surfaced, but those could be trimmed and discarded like a bad spot on a strawberry.

One of the reasons I so enjoyed Bradlee’s work is that regardless of Ted’s behavior, laudable or reprehensible, Ted remains great. There is nothing hidden and just about the time you are ready to hate the SOB and spit on his grave, Bradlee shows us the great compassion and generosity of his contributions of time and money to The Jimmy Fund, set up to help children with cancer. Quickly followed by a story about Ted’s verbal abuse of some woman. Bradlee was able to create a suspense similar to that found in a thriller, except the ultimate question was not who did it, but who is he.

The end of Ted Williams’ life was dominated by his less than stellar son, a man whose only accomplishment in life was being the son of Ted Williams, and whose moral compass could only point towards money. Not even the huge boom in internet pornography, a venture John Henry Williams was more than happy to try, could overcome his poor business skills.

However, there were two items that Mr. Bradlee presented repeatedly that had universal agreement. Ted Williams was an honest man, and he was the greatest hitter that ever graced a batter’s box. Even through the troubled time at the end of Ted Williams’ life, Mr. Bradlee never lets us forget that Ted Williams is “The Kid once and forever.”
… (lisätietoja)
 
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lanewillson | 2 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Apr 25, 2014 |

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