The personal story works. I've never read quitethis sort of parallel biography before. In a lot of ways the relationshipbetween FDR and his astonishingly complex, compassionate wife makes aperfect lens through which to view the times. Goodwin has plenty of chancesto let Eleanor's various interests touch on different aspects of Americanlife; hardly anything escapes the first lady's list of interests andcauses, so there's no strain to include anything, that's for sure.
Isometimes found myself, though, wishing the emphasis was more squarely onbiography proper. Four or five times in reading the book, I becamemomentarily bogged down in passages involving, say, big picture statistics,and wanted to concentrate on the motives and feelings of Eleanor andFranklin again. In particular, Eleanor's various interests often serve tointroduce some new social issue, and I wanted to really understand *her*appreciation of things rather than reading a set of statistics she wouldn'thave had access to anyway.
Honestly, though, No Ordinary Time breatheslife into these people. You come away from the book understanding that theycould be huge, monumental figures and yet be complex and flawed and veryhuman at the same time. There's no taking away from the heart of the book.It's told well, and it makes a wonderful, rich, rewarding read.
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