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The Courage to Survive Hardcover – January 1, 2007
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length316 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPhoenix Books
- Publication dateJanuary 1, 2007
- Dimensions7.25 x 1 x 7.25 inches
- ISBN-101597775681
- ISBN-13978-1597775687
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Product details
- Publisher : Phoenix Books (January 1, 2007)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 316 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1597775681
- ISBN-13 : 978-1597775687
- Item Weight : 10.4 ounces
- Dimensions : 7.25 x 1 x 7.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,663,281 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #12,432 in Political Leader Biographies
- Customer Reviews:
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There is an honesty to this book.
It is not as cleanly composed and perfectly laid out as a novelist might have constructed it. There are breaks and gaps which affect developmental continuity.
But it is an amazing recollection of a youth subjected to much adversity, written by that youth in his middle age.
Kucinich takes us on a journey of remembrance of some very tough times as he processed them, with enough dirt and grit to keep it fairly true to how it must have been. As a member of US Congress, and a past and probable future presidential candidate, there had to be some constraint in not being even more graphically detailed in his history. He's not to be faulted in this --- political opponents twist and use anything they can, and had he given them additional ammunition it would only be to his detriment. So, the book pulls some punches. He still reveals some of his youthful indiscretions, enough that we get a taste of an additional reality too sordid for full disclosure.
What emerges is a sense of the forces that helped form the present Representative from Ohio: his egalitarian sympathy, of the need to support those who are bottom dwellers from the predations of the uncaring rich, of fairness, of striving to change the system to lessen suffering, and to level the playing field.
The book takes us through his earliest memories up to his twenty-first year, and the start of his political career. The gaps in story and the fits and starts brokenness of continuity create for the reader the feeling that his life had such disconnection. As it did : as he described it for Studs Terkel, it was an ethnic "Grapes of Wrath." His father's family had thirteen children, his mother's twelve, and he was the eldest of seven children in his own family. Everpresent poverty, and lack of material necessities (like a roof and floor) dangerously blended with the effects of alcohol and domestic abuse to create the least safe environment for children. The struggle of his mother and father and family is in many ways the longheld classic struggle of a great percentage of disenfranchised immigrants to America. Very tough conditions. Not always an easy read.
But it also defines Kucinich as one of the very few ranking politicos in America who came through such poverty.
His writing style reflects the memory process. . . it is a purposeful utility to take the reader back into their own earliest childhood. I thought these first sections of the book quite good, in fact, reminiscent to me of some of the prose of Dylan Thomas. There are a few times when his writing moves with a more artistic flair, such as when he describes the "symphony" of the sounds of Cleveland, the sounds one would have heard in any industrial center. Suffice it to say that it is NOT a novel, and Kucincich presumably wanted his writing to stand for itself, even when it was not so sanitized or embellished. but it is at times very nicely written.
It is an honest work. We get a real sense of a sharp intellect growing and constantly probing the world around him, adding layers of complexity to his understanding. It is a pleasure to feel his maturing development through his sense of enthusiastic discovery.
I am hoping that at some time he continues the story line, past the age of 21, as he moved into different political offices and that he gives us even more of himself.
One thing that was affected by that uncertain childhood was his ability to generate intimacy based on trust; this book gives the reader the feeling it was hiding, for protection: he was a sensitive child exposed to some genuine risk. Kucinich, wiser as a man, may have finally realized how much acknowledgment of such intimacy was missing from his life.
And I pray that people like Kucinich continue to have some power in an America intent on marginalizing anyone not supporting our present Corporatocracy.
"Our Revolution" and his 1996 "Outsider in the House", which was republished as "Outsider in the White
House". I followed up with Paul Wellstone's "Conscience of a Liberal", which was better written. But the
best of all was Dennis Kucinich's "The Courage to Survive". While I do not agree with the congressman
from Ohio on much, I have always found him to be a captivating speaker. In the 2003-4 debates when
Al Sharpton was putting on his show and Howard Dean was running as an outsider, I thought, "No.
Bernie, the mayor of Burlington, is the genuine outsider in Vermont. Dean is still basically an insider
hack, but he was pretty good at grasping what changed between 2000 and 2004". But Kucinich
in 2003-4, that was a guy who, even though I don't agree with him, actually believed what he was
saying. As a writer, he's even better than he is as a speaker. Fortunately for me, the book has
little to do with politics as such. It's about growing up and a lot of it is actually Catholic and inspired
by his experience with wonderful teaching nuns, well before Vatican II so it's actually similar
to the experience of Pat Buchanan in some ways, though Kucinich took his politics in the
opposite direction. His stories of becoming a local politician in Cleveland and gaining
support at the grassroots level through hard work, listening and going door to door
is wonderful.
Page 287-88
Something about this neighborhood felt like home to me-the agony that working people tuck away in their guts,
the awareness of machines smashing mens' bodies, enraging their spirits but leaving them partially deaf and dumb to
the punctuations of gun shots, tires screaming on the pavement, fire engines shrieking at the pyres of mom and pop
delicatessens' steam shovels yawning at the rubble of residences cleared for freeway and neglect. This neighborhood
was dying. In its final hours, it had been drawn and quartered by freeway developers, bound up in ribbons of abandoned
railroad tracks and dumped on the banks of the fetid, terra cotta Cuyahoga River, which was brimming with rats, debris
and industrial chemicals that burned the eyes and caught in the throat.
Yes, I thought, as I walked door to door, this area had been given up for dead. When this neighborhood of poor and working
people died it could be anointed in sulphur dioxide and fly ash, laid out underneath a panorama of throbbing smokestacks and
dozens of inspiring steeples trembling with dirges in thirty languages. Then insecure pensioners, young Catholic grandparents
and hungry widows could pray the Rosary every evening for the repose of its soul. This is what I remember the most: walking
the Southside in the early summer evenings, listening to the radio Rosary drifting from behind locked screens. The silhouette
of the old people against their lamps, crossing themselves with arthritic fingers, praying for peace, for the faithful departed,
for the strength to endure deferred hopes; praying that family, church, neighborhood and life itself would retreat no more
and would stand still in time, preserved and safe, a dream-sculpted freeze.
They knew their neighborhood was dying, but they did not want it to happen.
One doesn't have to agree to admire this as a good approach to politics.
Many other Presidential candidates were born into privileged backgrounds and many are millionaires. They may say they understand what ordinary Americans go through, but they haven't lived it. When Kucinich says it, it's true.
Not only is Dennis an electrifying public speaker, he is also a great writer. It is hard to put the book down once you start reading it, until you've finished it.
Overall, the book is very inspiring and some parts will bring you to tears.
No wonder Kucinich is never fazed when someone calls him a longshot. When you spend a portion of your youth living in cars in some of Cleveland's worst neighborhoods, you already know what a longshot is. When your Mother gets sick and you and your siblings are whisked away to an orphanage and separated, not knowing whether the family will ever be reunited, you understand what it's like to be a longshot.
The book is highly recommended to anyone. Buy a few extra copies as XMAS gifts, a library donation(designate it as a Memorial to someone) or any other ideas you come up with.
Humanity is at a crossroads. We need someone of Kucinich's wisdom and character to become president to restore what remains of our democracry.
Dennis will have to write a Courage to Survive II that covers his days as a City Councilman, Mayor, his refusal to sell the city's low-cost electrical system to an Enron-style takeover and the decade-plus he was out of politics.



