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CHRISTIE WHITMAN FOR THE PEOPLE

A POLITICAL BIOGRAPHY

Admiring, sometimes cloyingly worshipful bio of New Jersey's governor. Trentonian reporter McClure tries to depict Christine Todd Whitman's trip from her silver-spoon upbringing in solidly Republican Somerset County to the New Jersey governor's mansion as a triumph against odds. But McClure's account tends to show instead that Whitman's political career and her economic conservatism grew naturally out of the privileged and politically active milieu from which she emerged. McClure's snapshots of Whitman's social life may make it hard for the more proletarian reader to relate (``Christie returned home to fox hunt,'' one anecdote begins, ``and had an amusing encounter with Jackie Onassis''). After staffing posts in Nelson Rockefeller's 1968 presidential campaign, the Republican National Committee, and the 1972 Nixon campaign, she married John Whitman, a New York financial consultant ``with the proper credentials,'' in 1974, and settled down to eight years as a full- time wife and mother. McClure covers in detail Whitman's unsuccessful 1990 run for the Senate against the popular Bill Bradley and her 1993 defeat of hated incumbent governor Jim Florio; the author manages to treat both races, lost and won by razor-thin margins, as triumphs for Whitman. Briskly reviewing her record as governor, McClure shows that Whitman's inoffensive blend of fiscal conservatism and with-it social positions (pro-choice, pro-gay rights) seemed to go down well with voters. Although McClure indicates that Whitman's social views may have alienated the Republican party's right wing, she tantalizingly suggests that Whitman may be a front-runner for the 1996 vice-presidential nomination. Christie fans will enjoy; others may wonder what the fuss is about. (photos, not seen) (First printing of 50,000; $50,000 ad/promo; author tour)

Pub Date: Jan. 30, 1996

ISBN: 1-57392-014-2

Page Count: 273

Publisher: N/A

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 1995

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MY OWN WORDS

Only the most dedicated Ginsburg fans, and there are many, will devour everything here, but most readers will find items of...

From the second woman ever appointed to the Supreme Court, a collection of writings ranging from the slight to the serious.

Now 83, women’s rights icon Ginsburg nears the close of her distinguished career as a law professor, appellate advocate, judge, and justice, arguably having done more to move our law in the direction of gender equality than any living person. Now, as two Georgetown Law professors, Hartnett and Williams (emerita) prepare her official biography, they have collected Ginsburg’s speeches, lectures, articles, and opinions, some on offer here. They preface most of this material with explanatory, wholly complimentary notes and begin with a chapter of juvenilia, demonstrating Ginsburg’s early interest in human rights and in preserving individual liberties. Passages devoted to “the lighter side” of life at the Supreme Court include, for example, Ginsburg’s musings on lawyers depicted in opera, not least her own “starring” role in Scalia/Ginsburg. There follows a section on “waypavers” and “pathmarkers,” Ginsburg’s tributes to, among others, Belva Lockwood, the first woman admitted to the Supreme Court Bar, Gloria Steinem, “the face of feminism,” and Sandra Day O’Connor, the court’s first woman justice. Especially good are the author’s observations on the court’s “Jewish seat” and her charming lecture on four notable Supreme Court wives. These, and many other agreeable selections, are characterized as “remarks,” delivered and often recycled for various audiences. The collection also contains numerous bench announcements, summaries of some of Ginsburg’s most consequential opinions and dissents, and a few revealing essays that offer keys to her jurisprudence: for example, her perspective on the role of dissents, the value of consulting foreign law, and the wisdom of “measured motions” by the judiciary, wherein she mildly criticizes Roe v. Wade for provoking a backlash and halting “a political process that was moving in a reform direction.”

Only the most dedicated Ginsburg fans, and there are many, will devour everything here, but most readers will find items of interest from this icon of women’s rights.

Pub Date: Oct. 4, 2016

ISBN: 978-1-5011-4524-7

Page Count: 368

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: Aug. 24, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2016

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BUCK

A MEMOIR

Asante is a talented writer, but his memoir is undernourished.

A young black man’s self-destructive arc, cut short by a passion for writing.

Asante’s (It’s Bigger than Hip-Hop, 2008, etc.) memoir, based on his teenage years in inner-city Philadelphia, undoubtedly reflects the experiences of many African-American youngsters today in such cities. By age 14, the author was an inquisitive, insecure teen facing the hazards that led his beleaguered mother, a teacher, to warn him, “[t]hey are out there looking for young black boys to put in the system.” This was first driven home to Asante when his brother received a long prison sentence for statutory rape; later, his father, a proud, unyielding scholar of Afrocentrism, abruptly left under financial strain, and his mother was hospitalized after increasing emotional instability. Despite their strong influences, Asante seemed headed for jail or death on the streets. This is not unexplored territory, but the book’s strength lies in Asante’s vibrant, specific observations and, at times, the percussive prose that captures them. The author’s fluid, filmic images of black urban life feel unique and disturbing: “Fiends, as thin as crack pipes, dance—the dancing dead….Everybody’s eyes curry yellow or smog gray, dead as sunken ships.” Unfortunately, this is balanced by a familiar stance of adolescent hip-hop braggadocio (with some of that genre’s misogyny) and by narrative melodrama of gangs and drug dealing that is neatly resolved in the final chapters, when an alternative school experience finally broke through Asante’s ennui and the murderous dealers to whom he owed thousands were conveniently arrested. The author constantly breaks up the storytelling with unnecessary spacing, lyrics from (mostly) 1990s rap, excerpts from his mother’s journal, letters from his imprisoned brother, and quotations from the scholars he encountered on his intellectual walkabout in his late adolescence. Still, young readers may benefit from Asante’s message: that an embrace of books and culture can help one slough off the genuinely dangerous pathologies of urban life.

Asante is a talented writer, but his memoir is undernourished.

Pub Date: Aug. 20, 2013

ISBN: 978-0-8129-9341-7

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Spiegel & Grau

Review Posted Online: July 6, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2013

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