American Sketches
Great Leaders, Creative Thinkers, and Heroes of a Hurricane
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
One of America's most versatile writers, author of bestselling biographies such as Steve Jobs and Benjamin Franklin, has assembled a gallery of portraits of (mostly) Americans that celebreate genius, talent, and versatility, and traces his own education as a writer and biographer.
In this collection of essays, the brilliant, acclaimed biographer Walter Isaacson reflects on lessons to be learned from Benjamin Franklin, Albert Einstein, Bill Gates, Henry Kissinger, Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev, Hillary Clinton and Bill Clinton, and other interesting characters he has chronicled both as biographer and journalist. The people he writes about have an awesome intelligence, but that is not the secret to their success. They had qualities that were even more rare, such as imagination and true curiousity.
Isaacson also reflects on how he became a writer, the lessons he learned from various people he met, and the challenges for journalism in the digital age.
He also offers loving tributes to his hometown of New Orleans, which offers many of the ingredients for a creative culture, and to the Louisiana novelist Walker Percy, who was an early mentor. In an anecdotal and personal way, Isaacson describes the joys of writing and the way that tales about the lives of fascinating people can enlighten our own lives.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Conventional wisdom is stoutly defended in this staid collection of essays, mostly culled from the author's newspaper and magazine articles. Isaacson (Einstein) has a knack for finding the middle ground and the incontestable truism in any topic. Thus, Benjamin Franklin's life shows us that "democracy requires pragmatic people who can find common ground," but also know when "to take a stand." Colin Powell is "an exemplar of the balance" between realism and idealism that foreign policy demands. A piece on Time cofounder Henry Luce extols "common sense" over "knee-jerk ideological faiths." (The one extremist the author wholeheartedly supports is Albert Einstein, a "rebel" against received notions of time and space, who receives several glowing hosannas.) Isaacson also mines a vein of cautious and sometimes dated business futurism the collection includes breathless profiles of moguls Bill Gates and Andrew Grove that yields such banal prognostications as "Among the few things certain about the century are that it will be wired, networked and global." It's hard to argue with Isaacson's pronouncements and harder still to stay awake for them.