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It's a 688 page tome, opus & a statement about a generation. Jun 12, 2010 I'd read some, set it aside, read some etc. Not exactly a page turner. But over all accessible
& I got through it & it's pretty good. Tom Brokaw was not a participant, merely an observer with a very good job at NBC news. The years are the 60's, roughly defined from JFK's assassination in 63 to Nixon resignation in 74. The story is largely told though the lives of many participants, "Boomers", who talked to Mr. Brokaw about those times. They're famous, infamous, ordinary & extraordinary & have lots of stories.
Overlying this period of course, is the war. The galvanizing event that defined everything. Every generation has defining events. The greatest generation had the one-two punch of the great depression & of course World War II. The silent generation had an overlay of the cold war & civil rights. Our generation had had the Vietnam War & Watergate. Not as sexy as world war & massive depression but every bit as significant.
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
Brokaw misses the whole point! Nov 23, 2009 Boom! is completely worthless. Brokaw has no idea of what was really happening in America in the sixties. He just looked down on it from the disconnected perspective of his own sheltered journalistic world. He was not one of us; he was one of them. For a more authentic look at the era from someone who actually lived *in* it rather than *above* it, try Die at the Right Time! A Subjective Cultural History of the American Sixties.
If you want to hear from the "winners" and not the "whiners"... Nov 03, 2009 Then this is your book. Want to hear from those who actually fought in Vietnam - great! Vietnam war heroes (Chuck Hagel, Jim Webb) are allowed to give their views. But I would never count them as ever wanting to win the war. This is really not a review. I bought the book more than a year ago and still have not finished. I was in Vietnam for three tours. After that I supervised the DoD database ov Vietnam casualties and personally cataloged all the autopsy pictures. The reality of the war keeps slowing my completion of the platitudes of the war.
Perhaps in a few years I will come back and give you a review.
But if you were on the winning side, you will love this book. Otherwise - read it anyway. We all have to learn.
I am A "Boomer" Aug 07, 2009 "Boom" the book
I am enjoying reading the book about the 60s. The process of ordering and receiving was easy. The book came in and I was excited to start the reading. Thank you Amazon
2 of 4 found the following review helpful:
Boring, biased, biographical sketches Aug 07, 2009 It was a real effort to get through this book. Tom's liberal bias shows through loud and clear. The short biographical sketches of people he deems influential during the 60's (like Warren Beatty, Nora Ephron and Tommy Smothers???) are disjointed and there is no real central theme. Save your money!!
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