The Audacity of Hope – from the Monitor archives

Barack Obama gives readers a blueprint of his view that America requires "a different kind of politics."

By Ari Pinkus  |  November 16, 2008 edition

The Audacity of Hope By Barack Obama Random House 320 pp. $25

[The Monitor occasionally reprints book reviews of current interest. This review of “The Audacity of Hope” by Barack Obama originally ran in the Monitor on Jan. 30., 2007.] It’s easy to see why The Audacity of Hope quickly shot up to the top of the bestseller list. In a refreshing voice, presidential hopeful Barack Obama gives readers a blueprint of his view that America requires “a different kind of politics.”

Coming off as an earnest – if somewhat wide-eyed – new senator, Obama gives sweeping assessments of the country’s intractable concerns: healthcare, education, and energy.

Obama advocates, for instance, for universal healthcare, but leaves the details to be ironed out. If he decides to push beyond an exploratory presidential bid, the generalities won’t be enough. But his writing is at least refreshingly free of the vitriol and nuanced policy positions that characterize the debates in Washington.

Obama takes on the most divisive topics in America, such as race and social issues, in a way that shows respect for alternate views. A constituent who has problems with Obama’s pro-choice position on abortion receives a personal letter from the Senate candidate. On race, he’s firmly in favor of affirmation action, but notes how “many Americans disagree … arguing that our institutions should never take race into account. Fair enough – I understand their arguments.”

Obama aims, too, for Americans to relate to the woes of politicians by placing them on a basic human level. Politicians are driven to win, not only by ambition, but also because they fear the humiliation of losing. “It’s impossible not to feel at some level as if you have been personally repudiated by the entire community.” Obama says he still “burns” over the “drubbing” he took in 2000, when he lost by 31 points to incumbent US Rep. Bobby Rush (D) of Illinois.

In several other places, Obama is surprisingly candid, opening up about vulnerabilities, such as his discomfort at spending time away from his family and the role that his Christian faith plays in his life. He describes the search for meaning that led him to be baptized as an adult.

But unresolved questions and sensitivity on faith matters dogged him during his Senate race. While debating opponent Alan Keyes, Obama was thrown by Keyes’s statement that he wasn’t a true Christian partly because of his support for abortion rights.

“I was frequently tongue-tied, irritable, and uncharacteristically tense” while debating Keyes, he writes. It leaves one wondering how he’d handle a more formidable opponent.

Yet the openness and eloquence with which Obama shares his personal story interwoven with his broad vision for America is compelling. For those who have been disillusioned by the divisiveness of politics, Obama inspires.
Ari Pinkus was a national news editor at the Monitor.

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Comments

1. Nehla Zikria | 11.16.08

I think this book, The Audacity of Hope brings to light the unique
vision which marks President Obama. Also, I believe Alan Keyes is wrong
in stating that Obama is less of a Christian because he is for a woman’s
right for abortion. I pray that President Obama can fullfill his
unique vision in the future. I believe that the former senator
represents change and a profound vision for our beloved America.

2. samy diab | 11.17.08

Adalah movement definitely appeal to all democracy activists and human rights in the world Irthae cooperation for the values of justice, we have to support our campaign for Obama came out of our quest to be the permanent head of the most powerful country in the world a fairer and Tolerance
Sami Diab
Chairman of the Movement of Adalah definitely
Coordinator of the International Campaign to support Obama

0020126092950

3. EIDE.PATSW | 11.17.08

Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling (1775-1854) wrote I place God as both the first and last as the Alpha and Omega as the uninvolved, Deus implicit, and the fully evolved, Deus explicit. God, who is eternal, was in the begining. God , etrnal is with us now. God, in eternity, will be with us as the world unfolds.
Evolution then, follows involution. What was implicit is gragually made explicit as the spirit whithin all things]progressively manifest itself. In this as Schelling put it, the world is a “SLUMBERING SPIRIT”, waking up as history unfolds. That is why Barack Obama was elected President of the United States of America. OBAMA job is waking up the “SLUMBERING SPIRIT” of the American people a mission explicit approved by God.

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