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Paperback ¡Obamanos!: The Birth of a New Political Era Book

ISBN: 014311803X

ISBN13: 9780143118039

¡Obamanos!: The Birth of a New Political Era

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Book Overview

"Hertzberg has a novelist's control of metaphor and a comedian's gift for the one-liner."
-The New York Times Book Review

Ob manos is powered by celebrated political essayist Hendrik Hertzberg's "Comments" for The New Yorker's "The Talk of the Town" and the personal blog he began keeping on the magazine's Web site fifteen months before the election. Hertzberg follows the players and the stars while examining...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Essays that should be studied at school and universities

Around 90% of this book can be read for free online (just search in the New Yorker website). The essays were either past blogs by Hertzberg or his contribution to the Comments section of the magazine, which I think he corners at least once every month. (Hertzberg is a New Yorker columnist, essentially). Most of them are also available as free audio podcasts, read professionally and nicely. (See the New Yorker Podcasts Channel in iTunes). Lastly, if you already subscribe to the New Yorker (as I do), ideally, you shouldn't buy this book any more. But I recommend that you still procure one. Why? 1) The introductory essay is one of the most solid, concise, well-knit introduction that Ive seen in a collection of essays or stories in general. How Hendrik Hertzberg dispensed "I value political liberty and political rights (freedom of thought, speech)... highly than economic liberty, and econonomic rights (property rights...)... so Im a Liberal." is brilliant. It's a perfect demo how to put away the preliminaries before diving into specifics. It's also a way to draw the line between that proverbial conservative-liberal divide in a few words. 2) The chronological presentation of the essays substitutes for a very good chronicle, from the groundwork to the peak, of a historical milestone. Without waiting weekly, the essays leading to the Obama presidency is presented in succession. The first essay was about the Democratic Convention for Kerry's campaign, where Obama delivered the convention speech, and then the last two: a celebratory essay on Obama's win and a very solid New Yorker editorial entitled "The Choice." That essay is only the second time the magazine endorsed a candidate explicitly. 3) It is cited in another review that the absence of New Yorker's typeface and column layout makes "Hertzberg's fury naked to the eye." At times, imposing, but most of the time, Hertzberg demonstrates how surgeon-like argumentative essays should be chucked out. The essays' structure, finesse humor, the literary cadence, the manner of exposition of facts, conciseness, are all brilliant. These pieces should be studied in universities and writing workshops.

Vintage Hertzberg

If you have enjoyed the author's New Yorker columns, you will love this book. It's a collection of writings from Obama's campaign, and it almost gave me hope again. There was more depth and background than I expected. I am glad to own it because I know I will reread it; and I look forward to the author's next book.

The Obama campaign redux

Hendrik Hertzberg is one of the reasons why I subscribe to The New Yorker magazine so I anticipated a terrific read when I purchased "¡Obámanos!". I got it. Hertzberg knows how to write a perfect essay and here he strings together four years of them, following political events from just before the 2004 election to Obama's presidential ascendancy in 2008. As an essay collection, "¡Obámanos!" actually improves as it goes along. The earlier chapters are a bit harder to get through because it's like revisiting really old news. But when the author gets into the primary season and delivers an hysterical chapter called "Brouhaha", (on Hillary's laughing capacity) things really take off. Hertzberg is a liberal, of course, and says so up front...just in case you're wondering! Yet his ability to skewer the other side, making light of John McCain, Sarah Palin, et al. is a "smile per paragraph". His short offering on "Palinopsia" presents a humorous, surprising addition. In the end, Hertzberg says how proud he feels when he goes to vote, letting his son pull the levers and how he let the tears roll on Election Night, 2008. I felt the same way. It's a poignant ending to a wonderful book and I highly recommend "¡Obámanos!".

Born to write

Hendrik Hertzberg writes the way a Tiger Woods drives a golf ball, Roger Federer srikes a forehand and Dave Grohl plays the drums. Even if some readers may disagree with Hertzberg's unabashed support for Barack Obama, they will enjoy his elegant phrases and unexpected metaphors that bring his ideas and analysis into stark relief. Obamanos has the added element of a Cinderella story, from his early flagging of Obama's political genius through his victory in 2008. Hertzberg is a good guide to this unfolding drama as it happens. I only wish more of the selected essays addressed Hertzberg's passion for political reforms like proportional representation, instant runoff voting and a national popular vote for president. Perhaps those collected writings will need to wait until, like Obama, those reforms have their shining moment of national victories that put them in the nation's media spotlight -- certainly Hertzberg will have a great archive to draw on, as he does in Obamanos about the political rise of Barack Obama.
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