Rating: ****
Tags: Personal Memoirs, Lang:en
Summary
Nine years before the Senate campaign that made him one of
the most influential and compelling voices in American
politics, Barack Obama published this lyrical, unsentimental,
and powerfully affecting memoir, which became a #1 New York
Times bestseller when it was reissued in 2004. Dreams from My
Father tells the story of Obama’s struggle to understand
the forces that shaped him as the son of a black African father
and white American mother—a struggle that takes him from
the American heartland to the ancestral home of his great-aunt
in the tiny African village of Alego. Obama opens his story in
New York, where he hears that his father—a figure he
knows more as a myth than as a man—has died in a car
accident. The news triggers a chain of memories as Barack
retraces his family’s unusual history: the migration of
his mother’s family from small-town Kansas to the
Hawaiian islands; the love that develops between his mother and
a promising young Kenyan student, a love nurtured by youthful
innocence and the integrationist spirit of the early sixties;
his father’s departure from Hawaii when Barack was two,
as the realities of race and power reassert themselves; and
Barack’s own awakening to the fears and doubts that exist
not just between the larger black and white worlds but within
himself.Propelled by a desire to understand both the forces
that shaped him and his father’s legacy, Barack moves to
Chicago to work as a community organizer. There, against the
backdrop of tumultuous political and racial conflict, he works
to turn back the mounting despair of the inner city. His story
becomes one with those of the people he works with as he learns
about the value of community, the necessity of healing old
wounds, and the possibility of faith in the midst of
adversity.Barack’s journey comes full circle in Kenya,
where he finally meets the African side of his family and
confronts the bitter truth of his father’s life.
Traveling through a country racked by brutal poverty and tribal
conflict, but whose people are sustained by a spirit of
endurance and hope, Barack discovers that he is inescapably
bound to brothers and sisters living an ocean away—and
that by embracing their common struggles he can finally
reconcile his divided inheritance.A searching meditation on the
meaning of identity in America, Dreams from My Father might be
the most revealing portrait we have of a major American
leader—a man who is playing, and will play, an
increasingly prominent role in healing a fractious and
fragmented nation. Pictured in lefthand photograph on cover:
Habiba Akumu Hussein and Barack Obama, Sr. (President Obama's
paternal grandmother and his father as a young boy). Pictured
in righthand photograph on cover: Stanley Dunham and Ann Dunham
(President Obama's maternal grandfather and his mother as a
young girl).