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Download Ebook This Child Will Be Great: Memoir of a Remarkable Life by Africa's First Woman President, by Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf

Download Ebook This Child Will Be Great: Memoir of a Remarkable Life by Africa's First Woman President, by Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf

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This Child Will Be Great: Memoir of a Remarkable Life by Africa's First Woman President, by Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf

This Child Will Be Great: Memoir of a Remarkable Life by Africa's First Woman President, by Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf


This Child Will Be Great: Memoir of a Remarkable Life by Africa's First Woman President, by Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf


Download Ebook This Child Will Be Great: Memoir of a Remarkable Life by Africa's First Woman President, by Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf

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This Child Will Be Great: Memoir of a Remarkable Life by Africa's First Woman President, by Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf

From Publishers Weekly

Forbes lists Sirleaf, the 23rd president of Liberia and the first elected female president on the African continent, among the 100 Most Powerful Women in 2008. In and out of government, in and out of exile, but consistent in her commitment to Liberia, Sirleaf in her memoir reveals herself to be among the most resilient, determined and courageous as well. She writes with modesty in a calm and measured tone. While her account includes a happy childhood and an unhappy marriage, the book is politically, not personally, focused as she (and Liberia) go through the disastrous presidencies of Samuel Doe and Charles Taylor. Sirleaf's training as an economist and her employment (e.g., in banking, as minister of finance in Liberia, and in U.N. development programs) informs the perspective from which she views internal Liberian history (e.g., the tensions between the settler class and the indigenous people) and Liberia's international relations. Although her focus is thoroughly on Liberia, the content is more widely instructive, particularly her account of the role of the Economic Community of West African States. (Apr.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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From Booklist

Africa’s first elected female president, Sirleaf chronicles her rise from an abused young wife and mother to a woman with a career in government finance and international banking to the president of Liberia since 2006. Sirleaf confronted corruption and incompetence through several Liberian governments and suffered imprisonment and exile for her controversial positions before ultimately returning and challenging the long and troubled history of her nation. Liberia was created by the U.S. to repatriate former slaves, creating a tension between Americo-Liberians and indigenous peoples that continues. She recounts her struggles at home and abroad; she watched dictator Samuel Doe and later Charles Taylor destroy Liberia while she continued to criticize U.S. involvement with corrupt regimes. Having no colonial power to overcome, Sirleaf contends that Liberia has often struggled to develop and maintain a sense of true national integration, something she has sought to achieve as she has worked to bring economic and social stability to her civil-war-torn nation. An inspiring inside look at a nation struggling to rebuild itself and the woman now behind those efforts. --Vanessa Bush

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Product details

Hardcover: 368 pages

Publisher: Harper; 1 edition (April 7, 2009)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 9780061353475

ISBN-13: 978-0061353475

ASIN: 0061353477

Product Dimensions:

6.1 x 1.2 x 9 inches

Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

4.2 out of 5 stars

74 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#1,348,889 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

This is a very honest autobiography of an extroardinary woman. Madame Sirleaf doesn't include many specific dates such as her birthdate but nevertheless guides the reader through a honest protrait of her life. She discusses the hardships of her tribal and mixed race origins, as well as the elite Americo-Liberian background she was born into as the daughter of a lawmaker and teacher. She talks honestly about her strained marriage which she entered into at age 17. She even relates how her pocessive husband put a gun to her head inorder to control her. Yet she managed to leave her husband, despite having four boys to raise and pursue her career as an economist and technocrate. A brilliant and confident woman who refused to except her nations and genders limitations, refuse to give up her beliefs despite being jailed and threatened by brutal dictators, would go on to become a folk hero in her native land and revered throughout the world. Sirleaf worked for and ruffled the feathers of every President she worked for in Liberia from Tubman to Tolbert to Doe and Taylor in a span of nearly 40 years, until she herself at age 67 became the first woman to be elected President of an African nation. Her ability to rise through the male dominated Liberian and International Monetary culture, is what makes her story so compelling and an inspiration to women around the globe. And her ability to incorporate Liberia and her own legacy in an acurate historical perspective makes this an very important work for scholars around the world.

This review request is well-timed - my Book Club will talk about this book tonight and my opinion may be over-ridden. I looked forward to reading this book due to its timely subject (first female President in Africa) and timely subject matter (how a third world country was tossed into total chaos when "democracy" failed). Thus I encourage readers interested in female leadership and the fragility of political systems to read the book. My gripes with it are with how it is written, not what it is written about. First, the book contains "everything you ever wanted to know about Liberia and Ms. Sirleaf and much you don't need to know if you never knew anything about either Liberia or Ms. Sirleaf." In other words, in my opinion, Ms. Sirleaf needed a stronger editor, if not a ghost writer. The book is ponderous in sections ... I rarely "leaf through" a book; I did so at times with this book. Second, and important to me, Ms. Sirleaf did not convey an emotional sense of her journey. For example, she left her children with others while she attended schools and worked abroad, which surely would grip a mother with sadness. It is not conveyed. Further, she was imprisonedand in mortal danger from unstable political enemies, sufficient to terrorize most people (I'd think). She did not convey terror but rather tended to convey, more or less, that she was either "lucky" or felt "safe" in her gut. This while in a jail from which others routinely "disappeared!" I was left thinking that perhaps Ms. Sirleaf felt she had to always portray "strength," which no human being, save the disordered, can reasonably do at all times. Nor should any of us be expected to do so. Thousands upon thousands of Ms. Sirleaf's countrymen were killed by political leaders andwarmongers ... Ms. Sirleaf seemed to want to convey that she simply glided above the fray, always challenging and speaking truth to power, but somehow always surviving relatively unscathed, often rescued by the intervention of international colleagues or business acquaintances. She did not develop fully how those relationships came to be so strong either. I'm glad she survived, but I would have appreciated her conveying some sense of human vulnerability. (At one point, Ms. Sirleaf must be whisked out of the country under cover of darkness. I was reminded of Marie Antoinette and her family attempting to escape from Paris, an episode that had my heart racing as I read about it. Ms. Sirleaf crouching in the back of a car in her jeans? Shrug. The dangerous immediacy of the matter was not conveyed to me. It could have been.) Perhaps if Ms. Sirleaf had spent less time on Liberian history and statistics, she could have spent more time telling me about herself ... and not just her "resume." I came away feeling she sort of simply believed the title of her book - she was the child mentioned and she WOULD BE great! Check it off on the Bucket List! OK - but for someone who let me in to learn all sorts of (to me, modestly interesting) information about international banking and African inter-relationships, Ms. Sirleaf did NOT let me in to her feelings. Yet, the book is called a "Memoir," not a "History." I think it was in fact the latter - on both subjects - Liberia and Ms. Sirleaf.

I finished this ebook with a renewed respect for Pres. Johnson. The text and thoughts were very well composed and fluent. This book is a good read for anyone interested in the past, present and future direction of Liberia and Africa in general. Ms. Johnson spends valuable time and effort describing her unique and courageous views on Liberian policy and historical mistakes.On a trip to Liberia not too long ago, she was on my same flight and walked around the plane to greet me and the other passengers - I appreciated her down to earth attitude then, and even moreso now after reading this book. Her visceral account of the absolute horrors that have pillaged Liberia was gripping. She wrote it like she claims to live - without fear. I appreciated her blunt accounts of the attitudes of her countrymen - enemies and firiends. There were a very few passages that seemed self promoting and maybe a little grandiose, but Ms. Johnson is a politician, after all.

I read this book and The House on Sugar Beach to understand more about Liberia. Both are great books. This one is more educational than the other and highly enjoyable. I would give it 5 stars but there are a few places in the book that drag a bit and a few others that sound defensive, which I found slightly distracting. All the same, I highly recommend this book and I loved reading it. Inspirational.

Johnson's memoir was clear and candid. She focused a large part of her story on her financial and political career, perhaps rightly so, since she had just taken office at the time she started writing the memoir. She talked of various successes and challenges, and most impressively, took responsibility for some missteps and wrong judgements that she made along her journey, which is very unusual for most leaders. Her story is inspirational and will be for generations to come and is a must-read for all interested in gender and politics/power, African politics, African Development, the history of Liberia and civil wars in West Africa. Her tone throughout the book was however professional and slightly impersonal, which could be disappointing, especially when she was relating stories from her childhood and early adulthood.

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