TIGHTROPE by Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn is subtitled “Americans Reaching for Hope.” The husband-and-wife team of Kristof and WuDunn are Pulitzer Prize–winning journalists and have written several books, including Half the Sky, together. TIGHTROPE refers to the precarious economic situation faced by lower- and middle-income Americans. Throughout, the authors reference many geographic areas of the US, but return frequently to Yamhill, Oregon where Kristof grew up and where his family has a farm. As the authors share stories of Krsitof’s high school classmates tied to addiction, drug abuse, and suicide, it also made me think of Our Kids by Robert Putnam, which, like his Bowling Alone (which Kristof and WuDunn reference), is another sociological look at changes in status and opportunity for Americans over time. Kristof’s TIGHTROPE, originally published in early 2020, shares its own sobering statistics as well: “about one-fourth of the kids who rode with Nick on the [local school] bus are dead from drugs, suicide, alcohol, obesity, reckless accidents, and other pathologies”). The authors stress that personal responsibility alone is not enough to facilitate a turnaround; this book is an effort to raise consciousness about our collective obligation, especially to today’s children. TIGHTROPE received a starred review from Booklist (“hard for readers to stop thinking about”).
Sunday, May 26, 2024
Reflecting on America: Chasing Hope and Tightrope
CHASING HOPE by Nicholas D.
Kristof focuses on his life as a reporter and his almost forty years of working
for The New York Times. Over that span, Kristof has informed the public about
numerous crucial world events and still has important messages to share about
the pursuit of truth and the need for compassion and action in support of
others. Chapters in this lengthy text (roughly 480 pages) deal with difficult
topics like the Tiananmen Square protests, the Yemeni civil war, and genocide
in Sudan. Others profile lesser-known heroes, dissidents, and inspirational advocates.
Commenting on Kristof’s reporting efforts, his publisher says, “Some of the
risks he took while doing so make for hair-raising reading.” I concur and I
think listening to the audiobook of CHASING HOPE would be
fascinating – much like the tales of daring and courage which Admiral William
McRaven shared in Sea
Stories. Kristof weaves in interesting facts like, “My passports are huge, like
paperback books, for I get extension after extension stapled in at overseas
embassies. My last passport had 170 pages.” He turns to domestic issues and includes
a chapter on covering Donald Trump (“I had never known an American politician
so uneducated about policy, so self-absorbed and so deceitful…”) and another on
campaigning to be the Governor of Oregon (“a chance to lift issues onto the
agenda and generate political will for better policies”). Kristof describes how journalism has been
transformed in the last half century and how public attitudes towards journalists
have changed, too. Anyone who reads his pieces knows that his vision for journalistic
storytelling has remained steadfast “not just as a technical craft but as one
with an ethical mission: a better world.” Truly an act of hope.
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