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At the Heart of It: Ordinary People, Extraordinary Lives
 
 
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At the Heart of It: Ordinary People, Extraordinary Lives [Paperback]

Walt Harrington (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

September 1, 1996

Delving into the everyday lives of real, everyday people, Walt Harrington skillfully draws the reader into an intimate relationship with the men and women profiled in this powerful collection of stories--people like V. I. Smith, a homicide detective; Deane Guy, a stock car racer; Jackie Jordan, a social worker in family services; and Sheri D'Amato, a girls' soccer coach.

Originally appearing in the Washington Post Magazine, these stories, which capture a cross section of Americans, stand out in the field of journalism because of the unique way in which Walt Harrington uses unheralded, individual lives to elaborate on the great human issues of the day. In "Mothers and Daughters" three generations of women discuss how society affected the choices they made and who they became. "The Mystery of Goodness" follows a Harvard-educated lawyer who handles death-row cases for very little money because he feels the system is unfair to African Americans. In "To Have and Have Not" a young couple with two small children struggle to make ends meet. Harrington describes in detail the creation of a poem by Rita Dove, then United States Poet Laureate, in "The Shape of Her Dreaming."

Harrington has adeptly combined sociology and journalism into beautiful prose. As "literary journalism," the stories employ scene, dialogue, and physical description within a narrative framework. At the same time, they also adhere to all the traditional journalistic standards of accuracy, fairness, and balance. As a result, At the Heart of It represents a subgenre that is rarely practiced and seldom understood even within the profession of journalism.

All of these stories are snapshots, pieces of everyday life in America that are intended to be a mirror held to the lives of readers. These are not stories about which you can remain neutral; even the most casual readers will be moved by the glimpses Walt Harrington provides us of ourselves.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

What's extraordinary about these people isn't so much their lives as the way Harrington profiles them. In 16 pieces originally published in the Washington Post Magazine, the award-winning journalist and author of Crossings: A White Man's Journey into Black America displays a storyteller's ability to find the drama and pathos in seemingly mundane materials. Yet unlike Oprah, Rickie, Geraldo and other electronic purveyors of what oozes its way under the rubric of "human interest," Harrington neither demeans nor trivializes. Readers will sense the respect he feels for the young father and mother living "in the American netherworld between poverty and the middle class" as they celebrate a new job with a bottle of Manischewitz Concord Grape wine and a dinner of grilled hot dog and cheese sandwiches, macaroni and cheese and a tossed salad. The same is true of his compassion for a group of suburban 13-year-old girls learning to play soccer "with the abandon of boys," as they "sweat like roadside ditchdiggers, their T-shirt sleeves rolled up over their shoulders." Although his subjects include a few better-known sorts (including poet Rita Dove), most of the people here are the sort that the media tends to overlook. It is Harrington's gift as a writer that makes their stories equally compelling and unforgettable

Copyright 1996 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Review

"What's extraordinary about these people isn't so much their lives as the way Harrington profiles them. . . . It is Harrington's gift as a writer that makes their stories equally compelling and unforgettable."--Publishers Weekly, starred review



"In contrast to the popular image of the journalist as a marauding itinerant, Harrington settles in with his subjects. As a result he is often on hand at odd moments to capture critical exchanges, such as the conversation at a child's bedtime or the moment the zucchini boats leave the oven. He is that rare reporter who treats everyone he encounters with what appears to be infinite respect."--Madeleine Blais


Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 18 and up
  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: University of Missouri; 1 edition (September 1, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0826210783
  • ISBN-13: 978-0826210784
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.1 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.1 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,560,135 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A journalist's humane curiosity creates engrossing portraits, November 25, 2000
By 
Ann Sieber (Houston, TX United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: At the Heart of It: Ordinary People, Extraordinary Lives (Paperback)
When I picked up Walt Harrington's collection of his profiles from the Washington Post Magazine, I'll admit it was rather dutifully (he's going to be speaking at a conference I'm attending), and didn't expect to become such a fan. I brought a prejudice of "just a newspaper article," not expecting the impact of anything born of a such a transient outlet (today's news, tomorrow's fishwrap) to outlast the day, or at best a week. But Harrington raises his sights higher. . . and lower. With one exception (the sensitive portrait of U.S. poet laureate Rita Dove, so evocative of a poet's thought process that I made copies for all my poet friends), he writes about people not normally considered "important" enough to make it into mass circulation. For example, Harrington's humane curiosity portrays the real world struggles between an elderly African-American minister, once strong and dominant, and his daughters who now take care of him, portraying without judgment their struggles with anger, their seeking compassion and not always finding it. Harrington's psychology and insight are amazing as he examines the "ordinary people,extraordinary lives" of his subtitle, such as a couple who has managed to create a marriage in which they equally share the childrearing, or of another couple who have slid into low-level poverty, or the life-changing experience for girls who participate in a competitive high school soccer team. Each of Harrington's subjects seems fascinating from a different vector: the tough streets of D.C. and how they are pulling down a once-stoic vice detective (part thriller, part sociological portrait of an impoverished neighborhood); the life of a man who works tirelessly for the release of death row inmates (an inspiring example of humanity at its best); a study of three generations of women (the groundwater basic impact of family, plus a feminist perspective of the changing attitudes and opportunities for women). With almost every portrait, we both learn about a few individual people we'd likely never have had the opportunity to meet, and we also learn a larger lesson-about the sociology of a section of people, or about the dynamics of family. . . . Also, interestingly, eight of the 14 portraits focus on African-American individuals or families, even tho Harrington is white. Harrington is deft enough that I don't think I would have known whether he himself was white or black if not for his author's photo. I didn't get any sense of finger-pointing at his African-American subjects, although I'm also white, so may not pick up on the same cues as black readers. On the face of it, Harrington's color blindedness seems laudable, and mostly creates in me a curiosity about what draws him to African-American subjects.
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