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9780743283458

My Hero : Extraordinary People on the Heroes Who Inspire Them

  • ISBN13:

    9780743283458

  • ISBN10:

    0743283457

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2005-10-25
  • Publisher: Free Press
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List Price: $19.95

Summary

In My Hero, some of the brightest lights from around the globe share -- in their own words -- stories about the people who have been the greatest source of strength and inspiration to them. With essays by military heroes, political leader

Table of Contents

Foreword xi
Karen Pritzker
Introduction xvii
Earvin ``Magic'' Johnson
Muhammad Ali
1(4)
Dr. Robert Ballard
5(5)
Yogi Berra
10(6)
Sue Bird
16(4)
Senator Bill Bradley
20(5)
Reverend Doctor Calvin O. Butts, III
25(7)
Richard ``Bo'' Dietl
32(4)
Dr. Felton Earls
36(8)
Kathy Eldon
44(6)
Michael J. Fox
50(4)
Frank O. Gehry
54(4)
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani
58(3)
Senator John Glenn
61(6)
Erin Gruwell
67(5)
Scott Hamilton
72(6)
Ralf Hotchkiss
78(5)
Colonel Jack Jacobs, U.S. Army (Retired)
83(7)
Billie Jean King
90(6)
Sherry Lansing
96(7)
Frances Moore Lappe
103(6)
Leon Lederman
109(5)
Stan Lee
114(4)
Congressman John Lewis
118(8)
Dr. Bernard Lown
126(8)
Wangari Maathai
134(5)
Wynton Marsalis
139(5)
Senator John McCain
144(7)
Ralph Nader
151(5)
Paul Newman
156(3)
Stan O'Neal
159(4)
Raffi
163(4)
Ron Reagan
167(4)
Dana Reeve
171(7)
Paul Rusesabagina
178(8)
Dennis Smith
186(6)
Jeni Stepanek
192(4)
Vivian Stringer
196(6)
Rob Warden
202(6)
Elie Wiesel
208(7)
Acknowledgments 215(6)
Charitable Organizations Supported by Contributors to My Hero 221(6)
Tell the World About Your Hero 227(2)
About The My Hero Project 229(2)
About the Introduction Author 231

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts

Foreword How far that little candle throws his beams!So shines a good deed in a naughty world.-- William Shakespeare In the late summer of 1968, I watched from my bedroom window as police in riot gear battled protesters and bystanders in Chicago's Lincoln Park. Earlier that spring, I'd heard my parents talk in hushed voices about the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. The jungles of Vietnam burned nightly on our TV screens, and the aftermath of Richard Speck's murderous rampage -- eight nurses killed right in my neighborhood -- continued to dominate the front pages of the newspaper.Those were turbulent and violent times, especially confusing for a fourth-grader. But I was fortunate, because what I recall most vividly from my childhood are not these violent images, but the stories of bravery, generosity, and heroic endeavor shared by my parents and their friends around our dinner table. It was there that my siblings and I heard about a white manufacturer who refused to build a factory in the South with two separate sets of water fountains and bathrooms for "coloreds" and whites, and a woman who left her sorority in protest because they opposed her having a Japanese boyfriend. I sat spellbound as a Jewish visitor told us how a Christian family rescued him from a war-torn Poland, raised him, and then returned him to his mother's arms after World War II was over.Stories like these (and there were many more) showed me how courageous, honorable, giving, and fair people could be even -- perhaps especially -- in bad times. Hearing these tales, I imagined myself in the shoes of the people described, confronted by similar challenges, and I hoped I'd make similarly courageous choices.I was ten when I got the idea of starting a "good news" newspaper, filled strictly with news of good works. I realized even then that real-life stories of sacrifice, heroism, and courage make great copy. My good newspaper would trumpet the best of humanity and provide a counterpoint to the "if it bleeds, it leads" ethic that buries good news in the back pages.I grew up, and my dream of a good news newspaper got tabled, as dreams sometimes do. But even as I went on to a career in journalism and a family of my own, the idea stayed with me. The chance to realize this childhood dream came in the mid-nineties, when two friends, the accomplished filmmakers Jeanne Meyers and Rita Stern, approached me about My Hero.They were mothers of young children at the time, as was I, and like most parents, eager to make the world a better place for their kids. Specifically, they were concerned that traditional heroes were conspicuously absent from the great grab bag of popular culture offered to our kids, eclipsed by superheroes, pop stars, and celebrities. Jeanne and Rita's point was that heroes were still all around us, but they weren't getting airtime.Their solution: a web site called myhero.com, which would celebrate heroes and heroism. Here children and their parents could read and post stories of courage and inspiration to share with people around the world. This truly was my good news newspaper -- only better.The mission of the My Hero web site is to spotlight real-life stories that "Celebrate the Best of Humanity." That's what visitors have been doing since 1995. My hero.com now welcomes more than a million visitors each month. Clearly we weren't the only ones starving for some good news!The stories we receive from visitors to our web site testify to the fact that heroism comes in many shapes, sometimes unexpected. They also remind us of the boundless generosity and goodwill of our fellow men and women. Kids often write about their favorite sports idols, civil rights leaders, musicians, and movie stars. Yet there is also an unending stream of tributes paid to unsung heroes: neighbors, grandparents, nurses, or that special teacher, and, in one insta

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