FDR and the New Deal for Beginners

Author:   Paul Buhle (Paul Buhle) ,  Sabrina Jones (Sabrina Jones) ,  Harvey Pekar (Harvey Pekar)
Publisher:   For Beginners
ISBN:  

9781934389508


Pages:   164
Publication Date:   20 July 2010
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
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FDR and the New Deal for Beginners


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Full Product Details

Author:   Paul Buhle (Paul Buhle) ,  Sabrina Jones (Sabrina Jones) ,  Harvey Pekar (Harvey Pekar)
Publisher:   For Beginners
Imprint:   For Beginners
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
ISBN:  

9781934389508


ISBN 10:   1934389501
Pages:   164
Publication Date:   20 July 2010
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you.

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Reviews

The incredibly farsighted and productive presidential career of Roosevelt is handled in smart, dramatic fashion in this long-overdue addition to Steerforth's impressive For Beginners line of introductions to concepts, thinkers, and historical events. Buhle ( The Beats ) gives a clean overview of FDR's early years before heading into the meat of his story about America's most populist president. Dividing Buhler's text chapter are graphic renditions of many of the events by Jones ( The Real Cost of Prisons ), whose dramatic, woodcut-inspired art recalls political broadsides of the early 20th century. While avoiding lecturing, Buhle and Jones proudly speak from the left of the spectrum, a tricky balancing act. An introductory note states that the writer and artist were moved to create this book by the 2008 election of President Obama, which created a popular, democratic and egalitarian excitement that, even now, after a considerable letdown, has hardly faded in memory. Buhle and Jones do such a good job of illustrating FDR's staggering legacy, however, that shutting the book and returning to 2010 comes as a considerable letdown. <br>- Publishers Weekly<br> <br> <br> FDR and The New Deal For Beginners is an important experiment in comics as history, also a study of the grand reform era that readers need for today's and tomorrow's hopes. Get this book! <br>-Robert W. McChesney, co-author, The Death and Life of American Journalism <br> <br> This is a terrific narrative that will teach new generations about the hardships Americans faced during one of the most trying eras in their history and the social movements and president who struggled to help them. The team of Buhle, Pekar, and Jones illustrate the benefits of having a president who, whatever his limits, truly cared about the welfare of working people. In elegant prose and dramatic pictures, they do more than make the past come alive; they make sense of it. <br> -Michael Kazin, author of A Godly


The incredibly farsighted and productive presidential career of Roosevelt is handled in smart, dramatic fashion in this long-overdue addition to Steerforth's impressive For Beginners line of introductions to concepts, thinkers, and historical events. Buhle ( The Beats ) gives a clean overview of FDR's early years before heading into the meat of his story about America's most populist president. Dividing Buhler's text chapter are graphic renditions of many of the events by Jones ( The Real Cost of Prisons ), whose dramatic, woodcut-inspired art recalls political broadsides of the early 20th century. While avoiding lecturing, Buhle and Jones proudly speak from the left of the spectrum, a tricky balancing act. An introductory note states that the writer and artist were moved to create this book by the 2008 election of President Obama, which created a popular, democratic and egalitarian excitement that, even now, after a considerable letdown, has hardly faded in memory. Buhle and Jones do such a good job of illustrating FDR's staggering legacy, however, that shutting the book and returning to 2010 comes as a considerable letdown. - Publishers Weekly (July)


The incredibly farsighted and productive presidential career of Roosevelt is handled in smart, dramatic fashion in this long-overdue addition to Steerforth's impressive For Beginners line of introductions to concepts, thinkers, and historical events. Buhle (The Beats) gives a clean overview of FDR's early years before heading into the meat of his story about America's most populist president. Dividing Buhler's text chapter are graphic renditions of many of the events by Jones (The Real Cost of Prisons), whose dramatic, woodcut-inspired art recalls political broadsides of the early 20th century. While avoiding lecturing, Buhle and Jones proudly speak from the left of the spectrum, a tricky balancing act. An introductory note states that the writer and artist were moved to create this book by the 2008 election of President Obama, which created a popular, democratic and egalitarian excitement that, even now, after a considerable letdown, has hardly faded in memory. Buhle and Jones do such a good job of illustrating FDR's staggering legacy, however, that shutting the book and returning to 2010 comes as a considerable letdown. -Publishers Weekly (July)-- Reviews


The incredibly farsighted and productive presidential career of Roosevelt is handled in smart, dramatic fashion in this long-overdue addition to Steerforth's impressive For Beginners line of introductions to concepts, thinkers, and historical events. Buhle ( The Beats ) gives a clean overview of FDR's early years before heading into the meat of his story about America's most populist president. Dividing Buhler's text chapter are graphic renditions of many of the events by Jones ( The Real Cost of Prisons ), whose dramatic, woodcut-inspired art recalls political broadsides of the early 20th century. While avoiding lecturing, Buhle and Jones proudly speak from the left of the spectrum, a tricky balancing act. An introductory note states that the writer and artist were moved to create this book by the 2008 election of President Obama, which created a popular, democratic and egalitarian excitement that, even now, after a considerable letdown, has hardly faded in memory. Buhle and Jon


The incredibly farsighted and productive presidential career of Roosevelt is handled in smart, dramatic fashion in this long-overdue addition to Steerforth's impressive For Beginners line of introductions to concepts, thinkers, and historical events. Buhle (The Beats) gives a clean overview of FDR's early years before heading into the meat of his story about America's most populist president. Dividing Buhler's text chapter are graphic renditions of many of the events by Jones (The Real Cost of Prisons), whose dramatic, woodcut-inspired art recalls political broadsides of the early 20th century. While avoiding lecturing, Buhle and Jones proudly speak from the left of the spectrum, a tricky balancing act. An introductory note states that the writer and artist were moved to create this book by the 2008 election of President Obama, which created a popular, democratic and egalitarian excitement that, even now, after a considerable letdown, has hardly faded in memory. Buhle and Jones do such a good job of illustrating FDR's staggering legacy, however, that shutting the book and returning to 2010 comes as a considerable letdown. -Publishers Weekly (July) The incredibly farsighted and productive presidential career of Roosevelt is handled in smart, dramatic fashion in this long-overdue addition to Steerforth's impressive For Beginners line of introductions to concepts, thinkers, and historical events. Buhle ( The Beats ) gives a clean overview of FDR's early years before heading into the meat of his story about America's most populist president. Dividing Buhler's text chapter are graphic renditions of many of the events by Jones ( The Real Cost of Prisons ), whose dramatic, woodcut-inspired art recalls political broadsides of the early 20th century. While avoiding lecturing, Buhle and Jones proudly speak from the left of the spectrum, a tricky balancing act. An introductory note states that the writer and artist were moved to create this book by the 2008 election of President Obama, which created a popular, democratic and egalitarian excitement that, even now, after a considerable letdown, has hardly faded in memory. Buhle and Jones do such a good job of illustrating FDR's staggering legacy, however, that shutting the book and returning to 2010 comes as a considerable letdown. - Publishers Weekly FDR and The New Deal For Beginners is an important experiment in comics as history, also a study of the grand reform era that readers need for today's and tomorrow's hopes. Get this book! -Robert W. McChesney, co-author, The Death and Life of American Journalism This is a terrific narrative that will teach new generations about the hardships Americans faced during one of the most trying eras in their history and the social movements and president who struggled to help them. The team of Buhle, Pekar, and Jones illustrate the benefits of having a president who, whatever his limits, truly cared about the welfare of working people. In elegant prose and dramatic pictures, they do more than make the past come alive; they make sense of it. -Michael Kazin, author of A Godly


Author Information

Paul Buhle, recently retired as a Senior Lecturer at Brown University, has written or edited forty-two books. Sabrina Jones wrote and illustrated Isadora Duncan, A Graphic Biography. She is a longtime editor and contributor to the political comic book World War 3 Illustrated. She has created nonfiction comics for Wobblies! A Graphic History of the Industrial Workers of the World; Studs Terkel's Working: A Graphic Adaptation; and Mixed Signals, a counter-recruitment tool in comic book form. She lives in Brooklyn and paints scenery for Saturday Night Live.

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