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Ida M. Tarbell: The Woman Who Challenged Big Business--and Won!

Tekijä: Emily Arnold McCully

JäseniäKirja-arvostelujaSuosituimmuussijaKeskimääräinen arvioKeskustelut
1006270,903 (4.11)-
Tarbell was the catalyst for exposing the truth behind corruption and unfair business practices. She investigated and published works about the Standard Oil Trust for McClure's Magazine that informed the world of shady business dealings and skyrocketed her into the public eye. She wrote inspiring and engaging biographies on public figures, her most notable on Abraham Lincoln. Although largely forgotten as the country forged into the 20th century, her writing of the truth lives on.… (lisätietoja)
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Näyttää 1-5 (yhteensä 6) (seuraava | näytä kaikki)
Excellent biography and resource on Ida M. Tarbell. ( )
  auldhouse | Sep 30, 2021 |
This comprehensive and informational biography details how one woman used talent and determination to take civic action against big business. Ida Tarbell’s investigative journalism was pivotal to changing bad business practices during a complex time in American history. Author’s Note, Source Notes, Bibliography.
  NCSS | Jul 23, 2021 |
Summary: A biography for young adults highlighting Tarbell’s journalistic career including her series of articles and books taking on Standard Oil, her relationship with Sam McClure, her views on women’s suffrage, and her lifelong labor to support her family.

Probably no one was better fitted to take on Standard Oil, the empire Rockefeller built. She grew up near or in Titusville, where the oil boom began. Her father’s and brother were in the oil business, and directly affected by Rockefeller’s monopolistic practices. At an early age, she determined not to marry, believing wedlock was bondage. But she had not thought of becoming a journalist. She loved science. She pursued her ambitions at nearby Allegheny College, being given the run of Professor Jeremiah Tingley’s laboratory. At that time though, the only careers open for women were teaching and missionary work. Having her doubts about God, she chose teaching and accepted an offer to teach at Poland Union Seminary in Poland, Ohio. Teaching only lasted two years until she returned home to Titusville, set up her microscope in the tower room, and tried to figure out what to do with her life.

A visit by Reverend Theodore Flood led to a chance to work on science articles for women in The Chatauquan. She quickly mastered every aspect of the business, making herself indispensable. She became interested in the fate of laboring people and the growth of trusts. Her capacity to quickly master a subject, and write with clarity led to an endless stream of writing assignments until she felt she was no longer developing. She decided to risk all, move to Paris, research Madame Roland, and try to support herself with articles from Paris. She sold a short story and some articles, one of which was on the paving of Paris streets, and lived a more or less hand to mouth existence. Then Sam McClure came along and changed her life forever. He’d read Ida’s article on paving streets, and told his partner, John Phillips, “This girl can write.” First she freelanced and eventually joined the staff of the fledgling McClure’s which became the home of a brand of investigative journalism dubbed by its enemies, “muckraking.”

Emily Arnold McCully chronicles her rise at McClure’s. Much was due to her own writing talent. But there was a synergy between that talent, including her dogged research skills, and McClure’s dynamic (and sometimes erratic) character. McClure inspired pathbreaking journalism, while lacking real business sense. She wrote articles on Lincoln and on Teddy Roosevelt’s Rough Riders. McCully’s narrative describes the talented group around her and both the stress and fun of putting out the magazine. Perhaps at the publication’s peak, Tarbell was assigned the task to research and write on Standard Oil and John D. Rockefeller, the work for which she was most famous and would eventually be published as a book, leading to the breakup of Rockefeller’s monopolies.

By 1906, the magazine began to unravel as McClure struggled with debt. While Tarbell easily found work throughout the remainder of her life, it was never quite the same and her writing never after achieved the same greatness. Her continuing challenge from then on was her family, supporting her mother and brother. McCully also explores what many consider the black mark on her career, her resistance to women’s suffrage and legal equality of women with men. Her views were complicated because she supported opportunities for women in education and work and championed the cause of women had no choice but to work, often in harsh conditions. But she didn’t think women needed laws to be equal, and worried about the effect politics would have on women.

Ida M. Tarbell lived until 1944. She wrote several more business biographies and a book on life after eighty, even as she struggled with the onset of Parkinson’s disease. McCully gives us a highly readable account of this life in full, written for a young adult audience. The book includes a number of photos of Ida and the people and places with which she was associated. While not a feminist, she demonstrated the possibility that a woman could equal men by the sheer excellence of her work. She was striking in not trying to have it all. Perhaps the closest thing to a partner for her was Sam McClure. He pushed her, even as she helped hold McClure’s together. McCully gives a well-nuanced account of this brilliant and complicated woman. ( )
  BobonBooks | Feb 18, 2021 |
An outstanding biography of the pioneering investigative journalist. ( )
  Sullywriter | May 22, 2015 |
I had only a vague idea of who Ida Tarbell was before I read this book. I knew she was a journalist and influential in the early 1900s....and that was about it.

This book starts with her childhood in the oil boom in Pennsylvania and traces her complicated, controversial life until her death in 1944. During her lifetime she met presidents, was friends with Jane Addams, influenced anti-trust legislature, and changed the world. She also opposed women's suffrage, advocated that women stay home and not go out to work, and struggled with a world that was changing around her and, as she saw it, attacking the values of home and family she so deeply valued despite never marrying herself.

This is a compassionate and beautifully written biography of a complex figure. McCully doesn't attempt to excuse Tarbell's life but presents it from a sympathetic perspective, inviting the reader to be inspired by her contributions and understand the very human figure behind them.

The author's note explains how she came to write this biography; "Ida can still be admired, but she also has to be explained." Photographs and ephemera - newspaper cartoons, etc. fill the book. Back matter includes sources, bibliography, and index.

Verdict: This is an amazing book, well-deserving of an award. However, it's most definitely not for a middle grade audience. The complex person represented, including frank discussions of historical events and attitudes, is aimed at a young adult audience. That's a drawback for me, since the only young adult biographies that circulate for me are more inspirational/memoir type things. I can't justify purchasing this for my library, but it would be a must for a larger library with a more diverse audience.

ISBN: 9780547290928; Published 2013 by Clarion; Borrowed from another library in my consortium
  JeanLittleLibrary | Jan 11, 2015 |
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Englanninkielinen Wikipedia

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Tarbell was the catalyst for exposing the truth behind corruption and unfair business practices. She investigated and published works about the Standard Oil Trust for McClure's Magazine that informed the world of shady business dealings and skyrocketed her into the public eye. She wrote inspiring and engaging biographies on public figures, her most notable on Abraham Lincoln. Although largely forgotten as the country forged into the 20th century, her writing of the truth lives on.

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