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It Takes a Village, Tenth Anniversary Edition Hardcover – Deckle Edge, December 12, 2006
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A decade ago, then First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton chronicled her quest—both deeply personal and, in the truest sense, public—to help make our society into the kind of village that enables children to become smart, able, resilient adults. It Takes a Village is “a textbook for caring....Filled with truths that are worth a read, and a reread” (The Dallas Morning News).
For more than thirty-five years, Senator Clinton has made children her passion and her cause. Her long experience—not only through her roles as mother, daughter, sister, and wife but also as advocate, legal expert, and public servant—has strengthened her conviction that how children develop and what they need to succeed are inextricably entwined with the society in which they live and how well it sustains and supports its families and individuals. In other words, it takes a village to raise a child.
In her new Introduction, Senator Clinton reflects on how our village has changed over the last decade—from the impact of the Internet to new research in early child development and education. She discusses issues of increasing concern—security, the environment, the national debt—and looks at where we have made progress and where there is still work to be done.
It Takes a Village has become a classic. As relevant as ever, this anniversary edition makes it abundantly clear that the choices we make today about how we raise our children and how we support families will determine how our nation will face the challenges of this century.
- Print length352 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherSimon & Schuster
- Publication dateDecember 12, 2006
- Dimensions6.25 x 1.5 x 9.25 inches
- ISBN-101416540644
- ISBN-13978-1416540649
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now.
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Editorial Reviews
Review
-- The Times-Picayune (New Orleans)
"Wonderful and inspiring...important and timely."
-- San Francisco Review of Books
"CompellingŠ.A book about the basics, for nothing could be more basic than the way a nation cares for its children."
-- The New York Times Book Review
"Parents and nonparents should read It Takes a Village to remind them of the simple but essential point: Children must have caring, nurturing, and informed adults around them....A textbook for caring."
-- The Dallas Morning News
"An entertaining book of unseen power...the impact of Hillary Clinton's genuine belief in a children-loving society remains in mind long after book's end."
-- San Francisco Chronicle
"An extraordinary gift."
-- Los Angeles Times
"It Takes a Village deserves to be read...it would be a loss if the nation missed this opportunity to address the issues Hillary Rodham Clinton raises."
-- The Christian Science Monitor
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
We cannot live for ourselves alone. Our lives are connected by a thousand invisible threads, and along these sympathetic fibers, our actions run as causes and return to us as results.
HERMAN MELVILLE
Children are not rugged individualists. They depend on the adults they know and on thousands more who make decisions every day that affect their well-being. All of us, whether we acknowledge it or not, are responsible for deciding whether our children are raised in a nation that doesn't just espouse family values but values families and children.
I have spent much of the past twenty-five years working to improve the lives of children. My work has taught me that they need more of our time, energy, and resources. But no experience brought home the lesson as vividly as becoming a mother myself.
When Chelsea Victoria Clinton lay in my arms for the first time, I was overwhelmed by the love and responsibility I felt for her. Despite all the books I had read, all the children I had studied and advocated for, nothing had prepared me for the sheer miracle of her being. For the first time, I understood the words of the writer Elizabeth Stone: "Making the decision to have a child -- it's wondrous. It is to decide forever to have your heart go walking around outside your body."
Bill and I had wanted to start a family immediately after we married, in 1975, but we were not having much luck. In 1979, we scheduled an appointment to visit a fertility clinic right after a long-awaited vacation. Lo and behold, I got pregnant during that vacation. (I have often remarked to my husband that we might have had more children if we had taken more vacations!)
Bill was then governor of Arkansas, and my pregnancy was so widely discussed I thought the entire state might show up for the delivery. A lot of folks did, although, as far as I know, no one took pictures, or I'm sure you would have seen them by now. Friends gave us helpful hints about how they had handled pregnancy and parenting. One of my favorites, from a burly ex-football player, was: "Think of a baby like a football, and hold it tight." We read the advice books and asked endless questions of doctors, midwives, and nurses.
I persuaded Bill to attend Lamaze classes, where he and the other first-time fathers-to-be sat silently, arms crossed defensively over their chests, trying to look as if they were somewhere else. Our instructor asked how many of them had ever baby-sat or held an infant or, heaven forbid, bathed or changed one. A few mumbled, but hardly any hands went up. Then the teacher asked how many were scared to death of being responsible for a baby. Nervous laughter erupted, and many arms flagged in the air. After that you couldn't keep them quiet!
Despite all our preparation, when I went into labor, three weeks early, I wasn't ready. Governor Bill Clinton, Lamaze list in hand, rushed about trying to help me pack. One of the items on the list was a small plastic bag to be filled with ice for me to suck during labor. As I hobbled to the car, I saw someone loading a huge sack of ice into the trunk, and I remembered what a woman reportedly said as she was helped over the railing of the Titanic: "I rang for ice, but this is ridiculous!"
Chelsea's birth transformed our lives, bringing us the greatest gift of joy -- and humility -- any parent could hope for. Like every child, Chelsea was her own person from the beginning. She arrived with a look of determination on her face that conveyed a focus and intensity we would come to know well. I prayed that I would be a good enough mother for her.
Every uncertainty and doubt I had was mixed with wonder and astonishment. I was beginning to discover for myself a timeless truth: Parenthood has the power to redefine every aspect of life -- marriage, work, relationships with family and friends. Those helpless bundles of power and promise that come into our world show us our true selves -- who we are, who we are not, who we wish we could be.
From the time I was a child myself, I loved being around children, looking into their faces or listening to the stories they told. Like many firstborn children, I learned to care for children by babysitting my two younger brothers. As a teenager, I baby-sat for other children too, and at thirteen I got my first "real" job, supervising children at a park on summer mornings. Through my church, I helped care for the children of migrant farmworkers while their parents labored in the fruit orchards and vegetable fields near my home.In college, I tutored children, and later, in law school, I got permission to add an extra year to the regular curriculum to study child development. I wondered about children I passed on the streets, and I worried about their journeys to adulthood. As a law professor and a staff attorney at the Children's Defense Fund, as well as in my private practice, I saw first-hand the results of our failure to invest in children at the most critical stages of their lives. Too often, the best interests of children seemed not to be a priority on either individual or national agendas. The consequences are there for any of us to see: children's potential lost to spirit-crushing poverty, children's health lost to unaffordable care, children's hearts lost in divorce and custody fights, children's futures lost in an overburdened foster care system, children's lives lost to abuse and violence, our society lost to itself as we fail our children.
And then I had a child of my own to love, wonder at, and worry about. Like most mothers, I am the designated worrier in our family. When Chelsea arrived, I went from worrying only five days a week to worrying on weekends too. My biggest challenge was to quell my longing to protect my daughter from everybody and everything that might hurt or disappoint her. As any parent knows, that is mission impossible. Life is unpredictable -- and a child's impulse toward independence ultimately too powerful.
At four, my daughter refused my request to wear a sweater on what seemed to me an unusually chilly summer day. "I don't feel cold, Mommy," she said. "Maybe you do, but I have a different thermometer." Chelsea speaks up when she thinks I have exceeded the acceptable maternal worry quotient. But, like many parents, I feel there is much to worry about when it comes to raising children in America today.
Everywhere we look, children are under assault: from violence and neglect, from the breakup of families, from the temptations of alcohol, tobacco, sex, and drug abuse, from greed, materialism, and spiritual emptiness. These problems are not new, but in our time they have skyrocketed. Against this bleak backdrop, the struggle to raise strong children and to support families, emotionally as well as practically, has become more fierce. It is a struggle that has captured my heart, my mind, my life.
Parents bear the first and primary responsibility for their sons and daughters -- to feed them, to sing them to sleep, to teach them to ride a bike, to encourage their talents, to help them develop spiritual lives, to make countless daily decisions that determine whom they have the potential to become. I was blessed with a hardworking father who put his family first and a mother who was devoted to me and my two younger brothers. But I was also blessed with caring neighbors, attentive doctors, challenging public schools, safe streets, and an economy that supported my father's job. Much of my family's good fortune was beyond my parents' direct control, but not beyond the control of other adults whose actions affected my life.
Children exist in the world as well as in the family. From the moment they are born, they depend on a host of other "grown-ups" -- grandparents, neighbors, teachers, ministers, employers, political leaders, and untold others who touch their lives directly and indirectly. Adults police their streets, monitor the quality of their food, air, and water, produce the programs that appear on their televisions, run the businesses that employ their parents, and write the laws that protect them. Each of us plays a part in every child's life: It takes a village to raise a child.
I chose that old African proverb to title this book because it offers a timeless reminder that children will thrive only if their families thrive and if the whole of society cares enough to provide for them. Soon after I began writing, a friend sent me the cartoon on this page, which I think about every time I hear someone say that children are not the responsibility of anyone outside their family.
The sage who first offered that proverb would undoubtedly be bewildered by what constitutes the modern village. In earlier times and places -- and until recently in our own culture -- the "village" meant an actual geographic place where individuals and families lived and worked together. To many people the word still conjures up a road sign that reads, "Hometown U.S.A., pop. 5,340," followed by emblems of the local churches and civic clubs.
For most of us, though, the village doesn't look like that anymore. In fact, it's difficult to paint a picture of the modern village, so frantic and fragmented has much of our culture become. Extended families rarely live in the same town, let alone the same house. In many communities, crime and fear keep us behind locked doors. Where we used to chat with neighbors on stoops and porches, now we watch videos in our darkened living rooms. Instead of strolling down Main Street, we spend hours in automobiles and at anonymous shopping malls. We don't join civic associations, churches, unions, political parties, or even bowling leagues the way we used to.
The horizons of the contemporary village extend well beyond the town line. From the moment we are born, we are exposed to vast numbers of other people and influences through radio, television, newspapers, books, movies, computers, compact discs, cellular phones, and fax machines. Technology connects us to the impersonal global village it has created.
To many, this brave new world seems dehumanizing and inhospitable. It is not surprising, then, that there is a yearning for the "good old days" as a refuge from the problems of the present. But by turning away, we blind ourselves to the continuing, evolving presence of the village in our lives, and its critical importance for how we live together. The village can no longer be defined as a place on a map, or a list of people or organizations, but its essence remains the same: it is the network of values and relationships that support and affect our lives.
One of the honors of being First Lady is the opportunity I have to go out into the world and to see what individuals and communities are doing to help themselves and their children. I have had the privilege of talking with mothers, fathers, grandparents, civic clubs, Scout troops, PTAs, and church groups. From these many conversations, I know Americans everywhere are searching for -- and often finding -- new ways to support one another.
Around the country, for example, neighborhoods organize to close down crack houses and protect children as they walk to school. Businesses adopt family-friendly policies, open child care centers, offer parent education and marriage counseling. Churches, synagogues, and other religious institutions expand their traditional activities to include everything from aerobics classes and recovery groups to intergenerational day care centers. Parent-teacher associations, once lagging in attendance, find new life in some school districts as the baby boomer generation flocks to back-to-school nights and volunteers time in the classroom. Even our technology offers us new ways of coming together, through radio talk shows, E-mail, and the Internet.
The networks of relationships we form and depend on are our modern-day villages, but they reach well beyond city limits. Many of them necessarily involve the whole nation. They are the basis for our "civil society," a term social scientists use to describe the way we work together for common purposes. Whether we harness their potential for the greater good or allow ourselves to drift into alienation and divisiveness depends on the choices we make now.
We cannot move forward by looking to the past for easy solutions. Even if a golden age had existed, we could not simply graft it onto today's busier, more impersonal and complicated world. Instead, our challenge is to arrive at a consensus of values and a common vision of what we can do today, individually and collectively, to build strong families and communities. Creating that consensus in a democracy depends on seriously considering other points of view, resisting the lure of extremist rhetoric, and balancing individual rights and freedoms with personal responsibility and mutual obligations.
The true test of the consensus we build is how well we care for our children. For a child, the village must remain personal. Talking to a baby while changing a diaper, playing airplane to entice a toddler to accept a spoonful of food, tossing a ball back and forth with a teenager, are tasks that cannot be carried out in cyberspace. They require the presence of caring adults who are dedicated to children's growth, nurturing, and well-being. What we do to participate in and support that network -- from the way we care for our own children to the jobs we do, the causes we join, and the kinds of legislation we support -- is mirrored every day in the experiences of America's children. We can read our national character most plainly in the result.
How well we care for our own and other people's children isn't only a question of morality; our self-interest is at stake too. No family is immune to the influences of the larger society. No matter what my husband and I do to protect and prepare Chelsea, her future will be affected by how other children are being raised. I don't want her to grow up in an America sharply divided by income, race, or religion. I'd like to minimize the odds of her suffering at the hands of someone who didn't have enough love or discipline, opportunity or responsibility, as a child. I want her to believe, as her father and I did, that the American Dream is within reach of anyone willing to work hard and take responsibility. I want her to live in an America that is still strong and promising to its own citizens and lives up to its image throughout the world as a land of hope and opportunity.
I do not pretend to know how to nurture and protect every American child so that each one fully reaches his or her God-given potential. But I do know that we are not doing enough of what works. As of this writing, one in five children in America live in poverty; ten million children do not have private or public health care coverage; homicide and suicide kill almost seven thousand children every year; one in four of all children are born to unmarried mothers, many of whom are children themselves; and 135,000 children bring guns to school each day. Children in every social stratum suffer from abuse, neglect, and preventable emotional problems.
Even though our national rhetoric proclaims that children are our most important resource, we squander these precious lives as though they do not matter. Children's issues are seen as "soft," the province of softhearted people (usually women) at the margins of the larger economic and social problems confronting our country. These issues are not soft. They are hard -- the hardest issues we face. They are intimately connected to the very essence of who we are and who we will become. Whether or not you are a parent, what happens to America's children affects your present and your future.
I write these words looking out through the windows in the White House at the city of Washington in all its beauty and squalor, promise and despair. In the shadow of great power, so many feel powerless. These contradictions color my feelings when I think about my own child and all our children. My worry for these children has increased, but remarkably, so has my hope for their future.
We know much more now than we did even a few years ago about how the human brain develops and what children need from their environments to develop character, empathy, and intelligence. When we put this knowledge into practice, the results are astonishing. Also, because when I read, travel, and talk with people around the world, it is increasingly clear to me that nearly every problem children face today has been solved somewhere, by someone. And finally, because I sense a new willingness on the part of many parents and citizens to turn down the decibel level on our political conflicts and start paying attention to what works.
There's an old saying I love: You can't roll up your sleeves and get to work if you're still wringing your hands. So if you, like me, are worrying about our kids; if you, like me, have wondered how we can match our actions to our words, I'd like to share with you some of the convictions I've developed over a lifetime -- not only as an advocate and a citizen but as a mother, daughter, sister, and wife -- about what our children need from us and what we owe to them.
This book is not a memoir; thankfully, that will have to wait. Nor is it a textbook or an encyclopedia; it is not meant to be. It is a statement of my personal views, a reflection of my continuing meditation on children. Whether or not you agree with me, I hope it promotes an honest conversation among us.
This, then, is an invitation to a journey we can take together, as parents and as citizens of this country, united in the belief that children are what matter -- more than the size of our bank accounts or the kinds of cars we drive. As Jackie Kennedy Onassis said, "If you bungle raising your children, I don't think whatever else you do matters very much." That goes for each of us, whether or not we are parents -- and for all of us, as a nation.
In the pages that follow, we will consider some of the implications of what is known about the emotional and cognitive development of children. We will explore both big and bite-sized ideas we can put to work in our homes, schools, hospitals, businesses, media, churches, and governments to do a better job raising our own children, even when the odds seem weighted against us. Above all, we will learn ways to come together as a village to support and strengthen one another's families and our own. Most of these lessons are simple, and some may seem self-evident. But it's apparent that many of us have yet to learn them or to apply them in our families and communities.
These lessons come from family, friends, and neighbors; from dedicated volunteers and professionals; and from the many men and women whose passion is to see the promise of children fulfilled. I wish I had the space to introduce more than a few of the many people whose determination to help children has touched me and to describe more than a fraction of the innovative ways in which our villages are working right now to improve the lives and futures of my child and all our children.
Some lessons come from countries I have had the opportunity to visit. The sight of baby carriages left unattended outside stores on the streets of Copenhagen said more to me about the safety of Danish babies than any research study could, and it made me long to know what the Danes and other cultures might teach us. As Eleanor Roosevelt said, "There is not one civilization, from the oldest to the very newest, from which we cannot learn."
Perhaps most important are the lessons I have learned from my daughter and her friends and from children all over the world. Children have many lessons to share with us -- lessons about what they need, what makes them happy, how they view the world. If we listen, we'll be able to hear them. This book is about the first and best lesson they have taught me: "It takes a village to raise a child."
Copyright © 1996 by Hillary Rodham Clinton
Product details
- Publisher : Simon & Schuster
- Publication date : December 12, 2006
- Edition : Reissue
- Language : English
- Print length : 352 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1416540644
- ISBN-13 : 978-1416540649
- Item Weight : 1.5 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.25 x 1.5 x 9.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #687,966 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #223 in Government Social Policy
- #717 in US Presidents
- #4,739 in Sociology Reference
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Hillary Rodham Clinton became the first woman in US history to become the presidential nominee of a major political party in 2016. She served as the 67th Secretary of State—from January 21, 2009, until February 1, 2013—after nearly four decades in public service advocating on behalf of children and families as an attorney, First Lady, and Senator. She is a wife, mother, and grandmother.
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Customers find the book impactful, with one noting its depth of knowledge about children's issues, and many appreciating its focus on family support. The book provides practical advice and is well-written, with one customer describing it as a Bible for Childhood Development Specialists. Customers praise the author's intelligence, and one review highlights its great perspective on America. The reading difficulty receives mixed feedback from customers.
AI Generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book impactful, with one customer noting its depth of knowledge about issues affecting children, while another mentions it is filled with people's experiences and serves as a reminder of how life evolves.
"...Some truths are empirical and this book regardless of politics was very profound. My field for example involves juvenile delinquency...." Read more
"...by activities centered around children that educate and encourage healthy and active life for all who are capable...." Read more
"The book is very factual, informational and filled with people's experiences. Very well written...." Read more
"...What I found was a down to earth, practical read that encourages governments, communities and homes to value children. It offers some great advice...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's heart for children and families, highlighting the importance of family support in child development.
"...I also got many ideas and better understanding about children and plan to use them in some of my projects and communications." Read more
"Clearly, an intelligent author that has the heart for children and families." Read more
"I felt this book touched a lot of important areas in child development. I think that it is critical to the practical application of theory...." Read more
"...Yes, children are the future, and their heathy futures depend on what they grow up with...." Read more
Customers find the book provides practical advice, with one customer noting its critical role in applying theory.
"...It offers some great advice. I recommend it highly." Read more
"...I think that it is critical to the practical application of theory. Some truths are empirical and this book regardless of politics was very profound...." Read more
"This book was a valuable tool in researching the way members of the community can work towards its generally improved health...." Read more
"This isn't a book by some left-wing nut-job. This is a very practical and middle of the road book. I listened to the audio cd.....read by Clinton...." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing quality of the book, with one describing it as very eloquent.
"well written and enjoyed." Read more
"...Very well written. This book helps to see the REAL Hillary Clinton and her true interest and concern for ALL families...." Read more
"As part of a book club, I ordered the Kindle version. It’s a well written book, but it’s dated." Read more
"Even if you disagree with Hillary's politics, this book is very eloquent and a great read...." Read more
Customers find the book informative, with one mentioning it is peppered with anecdotes.
"...Some truths are empirical and this book regardless of politics was very profound. My field for example involves juvenile delinquency...." Read more
"The book is very factual, informational and filled with people's experiences. Very well written...." Read more
"...It is also peppered with some anecdotes from her own experiences as a parent and as a working mother." Read more
"Good info" Read more
Customers appreciate the author's intelligence.
"Clearly, an intelligent author that has the heart for children and families." Read more
"She made me wonder what I could do to help today. What an intelligent woman she is. Helped me know who I will vote for." Read more
"smart lady...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's perspective, with one noting how clearly the views are expounded, and another highlighting its insightful look at America.
"...Her views are clearly expounded and provide the reader with more than just a glimpse of the authentic Hillary Clinton." Read more
"In depth and thoughtful-- a book that should be required reading by not only politicians but the general public. A must read." Read more
"Great perspective on America by one of the most influential women in America at a time when we need to think more about our future." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the reading difficulty of the book.
"...IT'S NOT AN EASY READ FOR THOSE WHO ARE NOT POLITICALLY SAVY, BUT ONE LEARNS A LOT OF POLITICS ANYWAY. HILIARY, I'D VOTE FOR YOU...." Read more
"...Her views are clearly expounded and provide the reader with more than just a glimpse of the authentic Hillary Clinton." Read more
"Good but it also gets wonky in some spots making the reading a bit difficult." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on June 11, 2013I felt this book touched a lot of important areas in child development. I think that it is critical to the practical application of theory. Some truths are empirical and this book regardless of politics was very profound. My field for example involves juvenile delinquency. This book speaks to some of the causes of delinquency including poor parenting and social disorganization. This is not meant to be a scientific piece per Se, but I think it does capture some important points that we in the field of criminal justice have been talking about for a long time.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 19, 2024Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseThe book arrived on time, was inspected and is good. Thank you. :D
- Reviewed in the United States on September 30, 2016Format: KindleVerified PurchaseThis book was a valuable tool in researching the way members of the community can work towards its generally improved health. Yes, children are the future, and their heathy futures depend on what they grow up with. The community can be brought together by activities centered around children that educate and encourage healthy and active life for all who are capable. The question is not whether is takes a village, but how the village can create an environment of learning and wisdom to pass down to our children.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 22, 2016Format: Audible AudiobookVerified PurchaseThis isn't a book by some left-wing nut-job. This is a very practical and middle of the road book. I listened to the audio cd.....read by Clinton. Well, she's not the best reader. Her voice tends to go a little robotic. I mean, there are people that do this for a living.....hire them.
But, the message and reasoning in this book I found to be quite good.
Highly recommended.
And, if you're someone who loves or hates it just based on the author; then feel free to keep your thoughts to yourself. If you're able to forget who wrote it, I bet the VAST majority of people would actually agree with the things said within.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 30, 2016Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseThe book is very factual, informational and filled with people's experiences. Very well written. This book helps to see the REAL Hillary Clinton and her true interest and concern for ALL families. It shows her heartfelt concerns for children and young people. I also got many ideas and better understanding about children and plan to use them in some of my projects and communications.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 11, 2016Format: KindleVerified PurchaseWhen this book first came out I bought into the conservative hype that is was nothing but liberal tripe. But then, with Hillary running for president and doing well, I decided to read it for myself.
Yea, you read that right. I adopted an opinion before reading the book.
What I found was a down to earth, practical read that encourages governments, communities and homes to value children. It offers some great advice. I recommend it highly.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 7, 2013Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseI was actually surprised at how highly Mrs. Clinton touted stay at home moms. I too believe that we can hope that every child could have a stay at home mom-it is the best environment for a child to grow up. I do however know the reality of life that health care is needed, one income may not be enough to support a family, and often families live away from relatives or friends due to their jobs. Tough choices have to be made by parents on a daily basis. I do believe that often we parents put too much pressure on ourselves to do it all and not ask for help. Being a military spouse who is often single-parenting when my husband works away from home, I do find that I need to connect with friends so that I have a support network on top of having a social network. I do however put off events and appointments due to lack of trusted child care. I don't feel that "my village" should contain people that I don't know. I don't want to teach my children to trust strangers-even if the government says they are safe, and I am concerned that this book in many ways praises "traditional family" arrangements (like stay at home moms or one parent at home while the other works) but gives people excuses to push for more government-created support networks and makes us think that actually being responsible and getting to know friends and neighbors is old fashioned and out of touch. Craziness! I know not every family can live on one income, but there are many that can and choose not to putting their children in the care of relative strangers on a daily basis. As a former daycare caregiver who also has a degree in Early Childhood education, it is sad how much time many children spend in child care when a parent could choose to stay home with them for the first 3-5 years of their life. We are promoting people choosing money and career advancement over their children. This book in many ways was encouraging, because Mrs. Clinton spoke very highly of women such as myself who choose to stay home, but there was also talking out of both sides of her mouth, so to speak, by saying that "just" being a stay at home mom is not a choice worth choosing anymore. We ought to be teaching people who are thinking of having children, that you may not have a village around to take care of your child for you, and it will be expensive to hire strangers to care for them while you are at work, so maybe wait or choose not to have children. I don't know what the answer is, but more government programs are not the right direction to achieve family connection and support.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 20, 2023Format: HardcoverVerified Purchaseused book but its was gently used, please with my purchase
Top reviews from other countries
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shopaholicReviewed in Italy on November 18, 20155.0 out of 5 stars è eccellente chi l'ha scritto quindi non potrei pensare a garanzia migliore
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchaseossia come nessuno possa neanche lontanamente concepire di poter vivere senza l'aiuto degli altri.
"occorre un villaggio per crescere un bambino" è un proverbio africano che insegna il valore dell'aiuto e della condivisione, che non si è meno autosufficienti o si perda dignità nel chiedere aiuto: è un invito alla conoscenza ed alla coscienza di sé ed una raccomandazione ad evitare l'orgoglio inutile che chiude, che rende la vita difficoltosa ed abbruttisce.
è anche un invito però a rendersi disponibili verso chi è in difficoltà con un occhio particolare ai bambini a cui si deve leggere, spiegare, raccontare, che devono essere coinvolti, interessati alla vita nel suo bello come nel suo brutto - seppur semplificandone gli aspetti così che questi siano più facilmente assorbiti e "digeriti"
il tutto avviene attraverso esempi di vita vissuta.
è in inglese...chi può lo legga, ne vale la pena.
FinlayReviewed in the United Kingdom on July 17, 20205.0 out of 5 stars Great book
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseThis was the final book of Clinton’s that I read, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Even decades on, many of the ideas presented here could be used to enrich society and improve the lives of children all over the world.
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amaくまReviewed in Japan on January 1, 20145.0 out of 5 stars ぜひ読んで
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase世界中の苦しみを払ってくれる良書です。皆さんもぜひ読んでね。
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Cliente AmazonReviewed in Italy on January 20, 20165.0 out of 5 stars Hrc
Consigliato a chi è sostenitore di Hillary Rodham Clinton,libro interessante ed avvincente e anche divertente.Lo consiglio anche a una persona non interessata all'autrice
RustyReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 21, 20175.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseBook as described. Packed well. Arrived on time. Thank you.







