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Le monde est un

par Wendell L. Willkie

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1385197,751 (4)19
Eight Women on a Journey That Will Change Their Lives as Lovers, Wives, Mothers, Daughters, Friends Just after midnight in a small town in Wisconsin, eight women begin walking together down a rural highway. Career women, housewives, mothers, divorcees, and one ex-prom queen, they are close friends who have been meeting every Thursday night for years, sharing food, wine, and their deepest secrets. But on this particular Thursday, Susan, Alice, Chris, Sandy, Gail, Mary, Joanne, and Janice decide to disappear from their own lives. Their spontaneous pilgrimage attracts national attention and inspires other women from all across the country. As the miles fall away and the women forge ahead on their backroads odyssey--leaving small miracles in their wake--each of their histories unfolds, tales of shattered dreams and unexpected renewal, of thwarted love affairs and precious second chances.In luminous, heartwarming prose, Kris Radish deftly interweaves the women's intimate confessions into the story of their brave, history-making walk. A breathtaking achievement, The Elegant Gathering of White Snows tells an incomparable tale of friendship and love, loss and liberation. "From the Trade Paperback edition."… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 19 mentions

5 sur 5
I bought this book, not for the contents, but for the inscriptions on the title page and cover. During WWII, Wilkie traversed much of the world, writing about his travels as he did. This book was purchased in 1943, while the world was still deep in war.

It's a pity that he died so early. One has to wonder where the world would have gone if he'd been around to influence politics after WWII was over. He was principled, and smart, and respected, and civil rights probably would have come to the fore a decade before it did, and with perhaps less animosity. This is an interesting book, and insightful. Perhaps it's just as well he didn't live, to see all those worthy lessons (mentioned in other reviews here on LT) ignored.

Worth reading.

Title Page: http://www.librarything.com/pic/4688174

Title Page from One World by Wendell L. Wilkie, with further signatures, including Roy Owen Webb. The further signatures and information on the title page itself may be signatures of friends, or of later owners.

Fly Leaf: http://www.librarything.com/pic/4688170

Fly Leaf from One World by Wendell L. Wilkie, comprised of signatures from people who gave the book to one Roy Owen Webb, and each of them signed it. Completely fascinating.

(I just gave this book away, to someone far younger than I, who will enjoy reading it.) ( )
  Lyndatrue | Jan 12, 2015 |
153. One World, by Wendell L. Willkie (read 8 May 1944) When I read the book in 1944 Willkie had already dropped out of the race for the Republican nomination, he having not gained even one delegate in the Wisconsin primary, to my dismay. I knew Dewey would be nominated and I knew Senator Burton Wheeler, who predicted that FDR would not run and that Dewey would win in a landslide, was not a good prophet. This book was about Willkie's trip around the world and not explicitly about the political situation and so I was not as interested as I would have been if I had read it a bit earlier. ( )
1 voter Schmerguls | Oct 1, 2013 |
While it is interesting to follow Willkie around the world and see through his present tense eyes how the war is going, how the US is perceived and how world leaders array themselves in the scheme of things, the most useful information is glossed over. Willkie accurately describes the goodwill shown to the US in time of war as social and political capital. If unwisely spent, the capital will be gone and the US will have nothing to show for it. In particular, he points out several times and ways that the US is in its high position precisely because it did not have territorial claims of its own; that unlike others, when it "liberated" a country, it did not replace invaders with itself. For that reason alone, Americans were welcomed everywhere. It was taken for granted they would go home. Clearly, these lessons have not been learned by anyone in power in the US since the second world war. ( )
4 voter DavidWineberg | Feb 14, 2012 |
One of the joys of the University of Chicago is the quarterly book sale at the Reg. My biggest regret is that I once missed the chance to buy an autographed copy of Robert Merton's "On The Shoulders of Giants" there (a friend narrowly beat me to it); my biggest success was finding this book, Wendell Willkie's 1943 account of his war-time trip around the world.

The book itself includes Willkie's observations about the people he met on his travels, including Stalin, Chiang Kai-Shek, Field Marshal Montgomery, and many more. In most ways, it's a run-of-the-mill work of war-time propaganda and campaign literature; still, it's somewhat more lucid and articulate than a similar book written today would be. I knew I had to buy it when I saw its front cover, which is covered with amusing endorsements by famous people of the day, like Walter Lippman, William Shirer, and Booth Tarkington. Clifton Fadiman even urges "every American" to read it, noting, "It's not a book, it's a searchlight." With an endorsement like that, how could I not get the book?
  dwar | Mar 24, 2007 |
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Eight Women on a Journey That Will Change Their Lives as Lovers, Wives, Mothers, Daughters, Friends Just after midnight in a small town in Wisconsin, eight women begin walking together down a rural highway. Career women, housewives, mothers, divorcees, and one ex-prom queen, they are close friends who have been meeting every Thursday night for years, sharing food, wine, and their deepest secrets. But on this particular Thursday, Susan, Alice, Chris, Sandy, Gail, Mary, Joanne, and Janice decide to disappear from their own lives. Their spontaneous pilgrimage attracts national attention and inspires other women from all across the country. As the miles fall away and the women forge ahead on their backroads odyssey--leaving small miracles in their wake--each of their histories unfolds, tales of shattered dreams and unexpected renewal, of thwarted love affairs and precious second chances.In luminous, heartwarming prose, Kris Radish deftly interweaves the women's intimate confessions into the story of their brave, history-making walk. A breathtaking achievement, The Elegant Gathering of White Snows tells an incomparable tale of friendship and love, loss and liberation. "From the Trade Paperback edition."

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