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Hardcover America Dreaming: How Youth Changed America in the Sixties Book

ISBN: 0316009040

ISBN13: 9780316009041

America Dreaming: How Youth Changed America in the Sixties

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

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Book Overview

An examination of America in the 1960s in the midst of revolution and the adolescents who shaped the world around them, causing a massive cultural shift. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

America Dreaming

America Dreaming is a great picture of the 60s for anyone. The layout is fabulous. The pictures, captions, and text (font, color and size)present each topic perfectly. I used this with middle school students who read carefully and completely. At times they mentioned they wished there was more information about a particular topic. Their discussions and responses showed an understanding of the subjects and times, and it led some to choose their research topics from the book. I wish there was more nonfiction for this age group that would engage students the way this book did.

A fascinating history book

Reviewed by Dylan James (age 11) for Reader Views (12/07) This book has a lot of short stories about fascinating history in the 40s, 50s, 60s, and even the 70s. It is mainly about black people trying to get their rights and kids becoming hippies. It has very intriguing stories about what happened when black people became fed up with how whites treated them. This book has at least 20 different stories about when black people would not follow the unfair rules that white people made for them. Even though the author mentions angry white men beating up and killing black people who were protesting (no pictures) a few times, this book is fine for boys and girls ages 9 and up. It would help if kids who want to read this book know a little bit about American history (specifically the Civil Rights movement) before reading this book. Even people who normally do not like history will like the stories (helped a little by the great pictures), and people who like history will like this more than a regular history book (helped by the book having unusually interesting history). The writing was pretty good, but there were a couple of parts where the sentences were hard to understand - it was hard to understand what the author meant. The only thing the author needs to improve on is more explanation of stuff like: Why did it happen? How did it happen? That is really the only thing that jumped out at me about this book. My favorite part of this book was the moment that black people got their rights because it's a happy ending and because the writing right at that point was terrific. I do not normally like history books and I was very engrossed in "America Dreaming."

A Portrait of the Boomers as Young Adults

In an amazingly clear and concise 175 pages or so the history and influence of the Boomer generation is laid out for a young adult audience. Starting with the post-war population boom and suburban expansion, the book focuses on the various key elements and movements that brought about the most sweeping changes in the way America and Americans defined themselves, for better or worse, and how young adults were at the forefront. The opening chapter sets the stage as 1950's Americans flooded to the pre-fab development communities of Levittown, as television and rock-and-roll took the cultural stage, as the Cold War began to heat up. Then chapter by chapter another piece to the puzzle is added -- the race for space, the Kennedy Camelot including the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Beatles and psychedelia and free love, the Civil Rights Movement. All tried and true subjects, but what makes this fascinating are the chapters on the Black Power Movement (including the full text of the Black Panther Party's Ten-Point Plan), the Chicano and Native American movements, the radical anti-war protests (not just Kent State but the Weathermen), the feminists and, as the boomers reached the 1970's, the gay rights movement with a bit of coverage on the Stonewall riots. Hill doesn't shy away from messier topics like drugs or abortion rights, covering the material in an even-handed tone that gives readers a chance to draw their own conclusions and make their own connections. The chapters move in a mostly forward progression but thy also stand alone in examining their subjects. History isn't presented here as a liner parade of facts and dates and places, but as ideas shaped by time and place, growing organically out of what came before without the tidiness or need for perfect order. Chaotic times call for a different narrative. The book flows at it's own pace, to its internal rhythms. Readers might be surprised to learn just how politically and socially radical their parent's and grandparent's once were. If nothing more, the material gives plenty of ammunition for conversations about what things were like "back in the day." Presentation goes a long way. The book's larger size -- approximately 10 by 12 inches -- allow for large blocks of text to be accompanied by full-page images and sidebars filled with details and tidbits. Archival photos and period ephemera make this a triumph for the designers as well; the book feels fresh without veering into forced hipness, even if the subject matter is a few decades older than its intended audience. It also makes the book half as many pages as if presented as straight text, making it feel more accessible. My only quibble, and it is minor, is that the book really is more of a portrait of the boomer generation than a pure examination of the 1960's. At the end of the book there is a year-by-year summary of major events that starts in 1946 and ends at 1975, pretty much the formative years of the boomer generation. I doubt that anyone i
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