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The CDs are broken up
into three blocks: 1901-1953, The New Century, The World Wars &
Fragile Peace; 1953-1969, The Atomic Era, The Cold War & The '60's;
and 1970-1999, Equal Rights, Watergate & Glasnost. While looking
through the read along, which is full of Time Life quality pictures
from each, and listening, I was struck by several things. First
of all, a whole lot of living has been done over the last hundred
years. Secondly, speech giving has become a lost art. And finally,
news coverage has taken a definite downturn. While I don't argue
that sound is better than print, I must say that a set like this
listened to serially, will educate the listener about the changes
over the last hundred years in culture and politics better than
the longest book by James Mitchner.
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The TV generation, myself
included, is hard pressed to keep up with all the information that
has come about in the past century and it's only going to get harder.
This collection is not only informative, but it is, at turns, heart
wrenching and humorous. The announcement that America has dropped
a bomb on Hiroshima is enough to take your breath away, especially
since we're living in the generation of the bomb. Before World War
II there was no force that could destroy the entire world to be
dealt with by the people. Likewise, the announcement of the bombing
of the Oklahoma Federal Building is riveting. The most damaging
terrorist attack on American soil made all the more interesting
because the announcer didn't know that it had been committed by
an American. Then there is the comedy, which in its own way is sad.
President Clinton's denial of his "sexual relations" with Monica
Lewinsky is a good example of this.
While a great writer
can produce images in our heads, the images are still our own to
manipulate. The voices of those living inside of an event, without
benefit of hindsight, are raw and real and it's easy to become caught
up in their emotions which in turn helps us understand the times
better than the written word. The saying goes that if you forget
history, you are doomed to repeat it. Every time Oliver Stone makes
a film, history becomes a little more muddled with fiction. Here
are the voices of the generations past speaking about their tragedies,
triumphs and daily lives. Listen.
Carlye Archibeque
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