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Watching Walter Cronkite: Reflections on Growing Up in the 1950s and 1960s
 
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Watching Walter Cronkite: Reflections on Growing Up in the 1950s and 1960s [Paperback]

Austin K. Kutscher (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Book Description

March 30, 2009
In Watching Walter Cronkite, Austin Ken Kutscher, M.D., reflects on how our lives were shaped by the transformative events of the 1950s and 1960s. As we celebrate our first African-American president, Barack Obama, in a world where American soldiers are still fighting wars halfway across the globe and where the threat of nuclear weapons still exists, generations both young and old need to understand the past events that were so instrumental in shaping our lives today.

Watching Walter Cronkite had its beginning when Dr. Kutscher realized his teenage daughter was part of a generation, born after 1980, oblivious to issues that have been the foundation of their parents' ideals. Using the historical events of the era of the '50s and '60s as a backdrop, Dr. Kutscher has fashioned a moving memoir of his experiences as a public school and college student, as he tried to make his mark in the world after his Mom had died of breast cancer. He shares not only his personal joys and sorrows, but also the parallel adolescent reminiscences of his wife, Mary Ellen. Their personal journeys are representative of everyday Baby Boomers who were never featured on the CBS Evening News. As Dr. Kutscher recounts our country's pains during the '60s--a decade filled with a tragic war and social and racial injustice--he also brings to life the electrifying feelings of the music of love and protest and the scientific achievements of our nation, not to mention the spirit of the New York Mets' "Miracle" World Series victory in 1969.

Watching Walter Cronkite will resonate deeply with older generations of Americans, as they recall the dizzying array of events that unfolded nightly on their TV screens--including the assassinations of the Kennedy brothers and Martin Luther King, Jr., the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Vietnam War, the anti-war movement, the counter-culture, the Woodstock Festival, and the crowning achievement of the 1960s--the Apollo XI Moon landing.

By chronicling our lives against this historic period, Dr. Kutscher hopes we can find peace and redemption in the turbulent times through which we are now living--and that we can explore, as did Neil Armstrong, our own "Sea of Tranquility."

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Austin Kutscher has written a memoir that not only delights in the ''60s suburbia, but also brings thoughtful insight to the current mind-set of the Baby Boomer Generation."-Ed Harris, Actor/Director (Ed Harris )

"As a historian, I took special interest in Ken''s take on the major events of the 1960''s. He touches on almost all of them, but thankfully he isn''t a Zelig or even a Forrest Gump. Watching Walter Cronkite is a coming-of-age memoir to which high school and college students can readily relate. It is a narrative that a skilled teacher can use in an American History or American Studies course."-Eric Rothschild, Retired Chairman of History Department of Scarsdale High School and 1990-91 Distinguished Social Studies Educator of New York State (Eric Rothschild )

"As a Marine infantry officer during the 1968 Tet Offensive and a veteran who experienced the effect that Walter Cronkite''s nightly news reports had on the public''s attitude towards the war and its warriors, I was deeply moved by reading Dr. Kutscher''s Watching Walter Cronkite-a "coming-of-age" memoir that reads like a novel and provides a poignant "flashback" of the decades that largely shaped the world we live in today. And as a retired secondary school administrator, I highly recommend this book for educators who want a valuable resource to help students understand the complexities that face all Americans during this most tumultuous period in American history."-Nicholas S. Romanetz, Colonel USMCR (Ret) (Nicholas S. Romanetz ) --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Review

"Austin Kutscher has written a memoir that not only delights in the '60s suburbia, but also brings thoughtful insight to the current mind-set of the Baby Boomer Generation." (Ed Harris - Actor/Director )

Product Details

  • Paperback: 420 pages
  • Publisher: Gordian Knot (March 30, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1884092802
  • ISBN-13: 978-1884092800
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,870,746 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A must read, May 17, 2009
By 
Kevin (Ledgewood, NJ, United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Watching Walter Cronkite: Reflections on Growing Up in the 1950s and 1960s (Paperback)
No matter what generation you are from, it is easy to find yourself associating with a character in this story. Reliving the same events whether with the same details and environment or transpired to the settings of a different decade, the satire and situations are all experiences we have lived through and can associate with. This is a very moving story effortlessly told through the eyes of the adolescent with the reflections of the adult. It is set in the backdrop of the post WWII era and the turbulent and revolutionary time of the 60's. It was a treat to journey through these times with Ken Kutscher. There are so few books that have the power to transform text into experience, but this is one of them. When reading this book, the words effortlessly vanish replaced by the imagery that Ken Kutscher, MD unobtrusively interweaves. His control of this craft allows one to truly understand these decades, even without first hand experience. I can only imagine the added satisfaction it must be to read this book having lived through these times. This is a great read - one that will make you laugh, bring a tear to your eye, give you goose bumps, feel conflicted, feel angered, feel complete... `and that's how it is.'
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Watching Walter Cronkite, June 2, 2009
This review is from: Watching Walter Cronkite: Reflections on Growing Up in the 1950s and 1960s (Paperback)
Watching Walter Cronkite: Reflections on Growing Up in the 1950s and 1960sI think Dr. Kutscher was my next door neighbor or at least he could have been. His book brought to life so many wonderful and forgotten memories. You always wish you could relive the best times of your life, passing through these pages with Dr. Kutscher you get a chance to do just that. I wonderful book, enjoy and "Let's go Mets" (Please!)
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A man who saw it all, February 9, 2010
This review is from: Watching Walter Cronkite: Reflections on Growing Up in the 1950s and 1960s (Paperback)


Austin Ken Kutscher conceptualizes exquisitely the conflict that was the United States from commitment to the Vietnam war to the ultimate reconcilliation of the Vietnam wall in Washington, where the names of every American killed in that poor country are recorded. The names are there, but no reason for the war is offered. Sadly, that may be because there is none.

Kutscher saw, and perceived, the climax of 1969 when Nixon was president, when Americans and Vietnamese were dying. Kutscher's climax draws together the rebellion of Americans against the war, the celebration of the Woodstock festival, the baseball triumph of the ultimate underdogs, the New York Mets, and the magnificence of two astronauts, who represented all of humankind, in their landing on the Moon. Walter Cronkite narrated the landing, thus Kutscher's title. Eventually, Cronkite, America's premier journalist, began to question to Vietnam war.

Kutscher's work starts early, with his childhood, introducing the characters who played a role in his life as he advanced through childhood to adulthood, medical school and finally service as mayor of Flemington, his beautiful New Jersey town. He offsets early life in the relatively comfortable circumstances of New Jersey and New York with less option-offering life that his wife-to-be was living. What was so clear to him--the futility of Vietnam--might not have been so evident to a young woman growing up in Virginia and Florida.


Through the book, he contrasts his temporary frustration of being below the standard required to do what, as a teen-ager he longed to do, play baseball, to the recognition of his true talents which led him to be physician and mayor.

To Austin Kutscher's daughter, Jannie, the Vietnam war is what World War II was to him--an event long in the past. His union of the war, Woodstock, the Mets' triumph in 1969, and the Moon landing is telling. In his way, he makes peace with a war long in the past when, as mayor of Flemington, he welcomes the traveling Vietnam wall--and its dismal roll-call of lives wasted. What a young man he tried to stop--absurd slaughter of Vietnamese and Americans--now, as mayor, he can only try to make up for.

Kutscher is telling readers to look not only backward at the absurity of the Vietnam war, but also to the sides, to the Moon landing and the folk triumphs of Woodstock and the Mets. His mother died when he was young, a tragedy from which he has not, and will not, recover fully. Perhaps America has not overcome the tragedy of Vietnam, but America will continue to press forward, as Ken Kutscher did after his mother died. Both he and America were injured by their respective calamities. Both America and Ken Kutscher keep trying.

Ken Kutscher, as cardiologist, has saved lives. He also brought the Vietnam wall to Flemington so that those who died in Vietnam will be recognized. He has done what he can do. His is a story worth reading.
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