David Michaelis
Author of Schulz and Peanuts
About the Author
David Michaelis is the author of three books. He lives in Washington, D.C., with his wife and their two children.
Works by David Michaelis
N.C Wyeth - A Biography 1 copy
Elenor 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Michaelis, David Tead
- Birthdate
- 1957-10-03
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Princeton University
- Occupations
- biographer
- Organizations
- Manhattan, inc.
The New York Observer - Relationships
- Bingham, Clara (spouse)
- Nationality
- USA
- Places of residence
- New York, New York, USA
Washington, D.C., USA - Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
"All her life, Eleanor believed that she had to earn love--by pleasing others, by undertaking ever more numberless duties, by one more tour of useful Rooseveltian doing.~ from Eleanor by David Michaelis
Compared to her beautiful parents, she was plain. Her mother was a social butterfly and her father was charming. Her mother nicknamed her Granny. Her alcoholic father could make her feel like a princess, but he was unreliable and could not save her. She struggled with confidence all her show more life.
She found happiness with her grandparents and while away at school where she was mentored by a progressive, free thinking lesbian. She would have liked to become a nurse, but was fated to 'come out' into the marriage market.
She married her cousin when he was still a priggish outsider. She saw him become a handsome ladies man determined to follow their uncle Teddy's career path to the White House.
She bore nine children. She lost family to alcoholism and disease. When she learned of her husband's infidelity, her mother-in-law forbade divorce. She found love outside of her marriage and family with women and younger men.
"Martha Gellhorn thought of her as 'the loneliest human being I ever knew in my life'."~from Eleanor by David Michaelis
Remarkably, this unfortunate woman turned tragedy into strength, depression into action. She had been ignorant of politics and world affairs and had accepted the status quo understanding of status, race, religion, world affairs. She threw herself into the work of understanding human need. As she traveled the world and the country, she learned, expanded, and became a powerful voice.
She pushed her presidential husband toward positions of equity and inclusiveness and empathy and morality. She expanded the role of the First Lady, a tireless campaigner.
She was a leader in the United Nations as they forged the first statement of human rights. On the President's Commission on the Status of Women she "identified the issues that soon became the agenda of the women's movement."
David Michaelis has given us a marvelous, empathetic biography of this complex woman. He does not spare Franklin Roosevelt or shroud Eleanor's deep love for Lorena Hickok in doubt.
Eleanor is a timeless role model who should inspire each generation. Life did not break her, the times did not discourage her, public opinion did not stop her. Eleanor rose above it all to follow her innate moral compass and lead us all to compassion and a just society.
I was given a free ebook from the publisher through NetGalley in exchange for a fair and unbiased review. show less
Compared to her beautiful parents, she was plain. Her mother was a social butterfly and her father was charming. Her mother nicknamed her Granny. Her alcoholic father could make her feel like a princess, but he was unreliable and could not save her. She struggled with confidence all her show more life.
She found happiness with her grandparents and while away at school where she was mentored by a progressive, free thinking lesbian. She would have liked to become a nurse, but was fated to 'come out' into the marriage market.
She married her cousin when he was still a priggish outsider. She saw him become a handsome ladies man determined to follow their uncle Teddy's career path to the White House.
She bore nine children. She lost family to alcoholism and disease. When she learned of her husband's infidelity, her mother-in-law forbade divorce. She found love outside of her marriage and family with women and younger men.
"Martha Gellhorn thought of her as 'the loneliest human being I ever knew in my life'."~from Eleanor by David Michaelis
Remarkably, this unfortunate woman turned tragedy into strength, depression into action. She had been ignorant of politics and world affairs and had accepted the status quo understanding of status, race, religion, world affairs. She threw herself into the work of understanding human need. As she traveled the world and the country, she learned, expanded, and became a powerful voice.
She pushed her presidential husband toward positions of equity and inclusiveness and empathy and morality. She expanded the role of the First Lady, a tireless campaigner.
She was a leader in the United Nations as they forged the first statement of human rights. On the President's Commission on the Status of Women she "identified the issues that soon became the agenda of the women's movement."
David Michaelis has given us a marvelous, empathetic biography of this complex woman. He does not spare Franklin Roosevelt or shroud Eleanor's deep love for Lorena Hickok in doubt.
Eleanor is a timeless role model who should inspire each generation. Life did not break her, the times did not discourage her, public opinion did not stop her. Eleanor rose above it all to follow her innate moral compass and lead us all to compassion and a just society.
I was given a free ebook from the publisher through NetGalley in exchange for a fair and unbiased review. show less
I grew up with Charles M. Schulz. His Peanuts strip had already been in newspapers for over a dozen years by the time I was born, and some of the earliest books I can ever remember reading on my own were the paperback comic strip compilations and Happiness is a Warm Puppy, which were so popular in the late 1960s. Schulz, who died in 2000 less than a day from the publication of the very last original Peanuts strip, provided an environment that was a mixture of "cute and safe" and "bitingly show more satirical" at the same time. Thus, it was with some trepidation that I read this new Schulz biography, having seen reviews that indicated the Schulz family was shocked at the portrait of Schulz that this book painted. Overall, I'd have to say this is an excellent biography, that goes a long way towards explaining Schulz' psychology and how he created such a lasting cultural contribution. At the same time however, it is somewhat disheartening to learn of Schulz' personal failings (affairs, distance from his children), and emotional problems (to his dying day he believed people didn't love him). Still, despite the shattering of his "kindly grandfather" image, I found this to be an engrossing read. If you can handle the unvarnished truth about an American icon, this book will help you understand Schulz, the brilliant but flawed man, and Peanuts, the timeless comic strip. show less
For being a cartoonist (humorist), Charles Schulz was certainly a lonely, tragically withdrawn figure.
I agree with many that Peanuts lacked humor, but at least for me Charlie Brown and to a certain extent the others resonated with me as awkward types that didn't fit in. Also, the kid's eye-level view with the adults relegated to a verbally noisy existence out of the frame was, and is, cool and vaguely anti-establishhment. Charlie Brown's sad Xmas tree, the double stiff-armed stage dance in show more the same Xmas special and sulking in the pumpking patch I still remember fondly like Snoopy's WWI dreams, Lucy's crabby psychiatry and her vicious ball pranks and, well, I guess it worked for me then, I don't need to laugh now... I recommend reading the Schulz bio. He was an imperfect, unfair and philosophically regressive man that still was very innovative, impactful and even important, IMHO. show less
I agree with many that Peanuts lacked humor, but at least for me Charlie Brown and to a certain extent the others resonated with me as awkward types that didn't fit in. Also, the kid's eye-level view with the adults relegated to a verbally noisy existence out of the frame was, and is, cool and vaguely anti-establishhment. Charlie Brown's sad Xmas tree, the double stiff-armed stage dance in show more the same Xmas special and sulking in the pumpking patch I still remember fondly like Snoopy's WWI dreams, Lucy's crabby psychiatry and her vicious ball pranks and, well, I guess it worked for me then, I don't need to laugh now... I recommend reading the Schulz bio. He was an imperfect, unfair and philosophically regressive man that still was very innovative, impactful and even important, IMHO. show less
Full-length biography of the greatest cartoonist of the last century, Charles M. Schulz. Includes details of the family life, career and far-reaching public influence of the creator of one of the best known comic strips and cartoons of all time, Peanuts. The books is detailed and truly fascinating but, like its subject, a bit melancholy. It is thoroughly researched and includes well-chosen panels from the strip that correlate to major events/themes in Sparky's life. A definite recommend for show more anybody contemplating a career in the arts as well as anybody who loves Snoopy and the gang. show less
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- Works
- 9
- Also by
- 2
- Members
- 1,692
- Popularity
- #15,179
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 41
- ISBNs
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