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From This Day Forward

From This Day Forward

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: REMARKABLE COUPLE/REMARKABLE STORY
Review: I received this book as a birthday gift yesterday - simply could not put it down. Possibly this results from my having followed these two people for many years (am a bit of a "political person"); but the thrust of the story is about kindness, friendship, honoring one's values and family, and, particularly, humor as an integral part of life! It certainly is not easy to combine marriage, family and work; the Roberts family appears to have made a blend of these an asset to all instead of a burden to any. Having lost the "other half" of my marriage a few years ago, the book only increased the joy in remembering the past and the special friendship (which is, after all, the basis of any good marriage). I do hope Cokie and Steve will consider a sequel: perhaps, as Tom Brokaw's book, "The Greatest Generation", engendered so many responses, this one will do the same. There must be many others "out there" who genuinely enjoy a love story which carries so many good lessons about life and commitment in our society. A must read for any considering marriage (still a great institution).

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: REMARKABLE COUPLE/REMARKABLE STORY
Review: I received this book as a birthday gift yesterday - simply could not put it down. Possibly this results from my having followed these two people for many years (am a bit of a "political person"); but the thrust of the story is about kindness, friendship, honoring one's values and family, and, particularly, humor as an integral part of life! It certainly is not easy to combine marriage, family and work; the Roberts family appears to have made a blend of these an asset to all instead of a burden to any. Having lost the "other half" of my marriage a few years ago, the book only increased the joy in remembering the past and the special friendship (which is, after all, the basis of any good marriage). I do hope Cokie and Steve will consider a sequel: perhaps, as Tom Brokaw's book, "The Greatest Generation", engendered so many responses, this one will do the same. There must be many others "out there" who genuinely enjoy a love story which carries so many good lessons about life and commitment in our society. A must read for any considering marriage (still a great institution).

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Warmly written and inspirational
Review: I received this book just before I was married and thought it was a wonderful gift for the occasion. The conversational style in which it is written makes you feel as if you are in Steve and Cokie's living room sharing their memories. The dialogue is interspersed with researched information about marraige customs from other cultures and other times. It drives home the point that all marraiges are not alike and there are no standards that yours should be held to, other than your own.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Calling for a Re-evaluation of Ms. Roberts' message
Review: I think that Ms. Roberts is less than inspiring. She called 20,000 American citizens "stupid" on national television (David Letterman, 11/9/00, regarding the voters of Palm Beach County, FL). Is this a woman who should be giving inspiration to the masses? I think not. Ms. Roberts behavior is offensive and reprehensible. She must be called on to retract her statement. After reading the book, which was horrifically insipid at best, I cannot reccommend it. It is vain and it is not even well written. I wish that there were negative stars to give the book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An utterly impressive book,from an utterly impressive author
Review: I was never an avid fan of Cokie Roberts until I read this book. Her insights into love, marriage, and family are mind-boggling. She describes in full detail her marriage to Steve and how they overcame all the complex obstacles that life gave them and how it helped them improve their relationship. This is a must read for all those interested in how to establish a successful marriage despite religious backgrounds.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Interesting look at marriage
Review: In "From This Day Forward", Cokie and Steve Roberts share insights and stories drawn from their marriage, including their own changing assumptions as the times changed. Interspersed with this are essays on the state of American marriage in history. Of particular interest was the discussion on the whole interfaith issue; how hard both of them worked to maintain traditions on both sides; also, the shift in both of their perspective's on both women's and men's roles in marriage.

They also discuss such topics as divorce and blended families. The chapter on divorce, in particular, seemed slightly sensationalized, and the examples extreme. Both of the Roberts' are from the baby-boom generation, so for those not in this generation, this might not be as interesting or understandable. It also raises the question as how those with fewer economic resources might achieve equality and parity in their marriages. However, this was, overall, a very interesting and readable book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A salute to love and marriage---American style!
Review: In her #1 New York Times bestseller, We Are Our Mothers Daughters, Cokie Roberts, co-anchor of ABC's This Week with Sam Donaldson and Cokie Roberts, examined the nature of women's roles, from mother to mechanic, sister to soldier through the illuminating lens of personal experience. Written with her characteristic disarming humor and affectionate intelligence, Cokie created an instant classic that hit #1 on the New York Times bestseller list where it remained for an astounding 26 weeks. Now, Cokie, who has been hailed by USA Today as a "custodian of time-honored values" joins forces with her husband of thirty-three years, political analyst and college professor Steve Roberts with FROM THIS DAY FORWARD an in-depth look at the institution of marriage, American-style. Part chronicle of their own courtship, marriage and family life, and part social/historical examination of marriage as an institution, FROM THIS DAY FORWARD uses the Roberts' personal stories as a springboard for discussing larger issues of love and marriage, work and family, parents and children. The book addresses such questions as: how in an age in which 50% of all marriages fail, why does the idea of marriage still endure, and what makes for ties that truly bind? Is it possible for marriage to flourish in a fractured culture in which families live thousands of miles apart? As the generations-old gate-keepers of family, religion and community fade away, what will take their place as the safeguards and strongholds of marriage? These issues and more are at the heart of this compelling look at the state of our unions.

Told in both Cokie's and Steve's words, FROM THIS DAY FORWARD offers a fascinating, intimate portrait of their own journey together, from their courtship in the early 1960's-a time when people married right out of college as a matter of course-through their days overseas, balancing two careers and the demands of family in the turbulent 1970's, to their status today as "long-marrieds" with married children of their own. They reveal candid snapshots of their relationship-from how they fell in love, to how they approached parenting with two careers, to how they worked through the conflicting desires and expectations that test every marriage.

Cokie and Steve also share stories of other American marriages: pioneers, slaves, immigrants, and Holocaust survivors. There is also a look at the surprising marriage of John and Abigail Adams, whose letters to each other reveal painful absences, heartbreaking tragedies, warm entreaties and wickedly funny, blisteringly honest exchanges. These extraordinary accounts show the universality of marriage-that cultural forces may change, but affairs of the heart do not.

FROM THIS DAY FORWARD celebrates modern marriage with all its glories and flaws and turns a warm, embracing spotlight on the issues confronting today's couples who are determined to have and to hold from this day forward. As Cokie and Steve conclude, "Marriage is an act of faith, as well as hope...an unlimited commitment to an unknowable partner." Filled with sage advice and written in a winning, fireside-chat style, FROM THIS DAY FORWARD is ultimately the story of all husbands and wives, the way they support each other and yet continue to grow and change as individuals.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: It takes a narcissist
Review: It takes a narcissist of tremendous proportions to foist this scrapbook off on an unsuspecting public. On the plus side, Cokie Roberts does more than her usual cut and paste from the work of others in From This Day Forward. When not pulling from the work of others, Cokie (and the compliant Steve) offer up tidbits that are supposed to inform the reader how s/he too can have a great marriage.
Apparently the basic rule for a successful marriage is to live in your own little world the way kooky Cokie does. I doubt she realizes how racist she comes off in parts of the book. (Yes, Cokie, condescension is a form of racism.) Or how laughable most will find her book. Reading of the great "trauma" of her life, you realize this is someone who hasn't experienced many character building moments in her life. The great "trauma"? Learning that her new employer wouldn't provide a limo and that Cokie would have to take taxis around NYC. Oh, the horror! Oh, the shame! How did Cokie ever survive?
(Had she been told to take the subway, one gets the impression Roberts would have called it quits right then.)
A vapid celebration of what appears to be a vapid marriage isn't necessarily shocking -- what's shocking is that Cokie (and husband Steve) put their names to it. Had a child offered this slight volume as a souvenir to a wedding anniversary, we all would have "oooh"ed and "aaaawe"d over it. But for grownups to write such a book about themselves is the height of narcissism.
The book works best as anthropological study of When Gigantic Egos Mate.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: It takes a narcissist
Review: It takes a narcissist of tremendous proportions to foist this scrapbook off on an unsuspecting public. On the plus side, Cokie Roberts does more than her usual cut and paste from the work of others in From This Day Forward. When not pulling from the work of others, Cokie (and the compliant Steve) offer up tidbits that are supposed to inform the reader how s/he too can have a great marriage.
Apparently the basic rule for a successful marriage is to live in your own little world the way kooky Cokie does. I doubt she realizes how racist she comes off in parts of the book. (Yes, Cokie, condescension is a form of racism.) Or how laughable most will find her book. Reading of the great "trauma" of her life, you realize this is someone who hasn't experienced many character building moments in her life. The great "trauma"? Learning that her new employer wouldn't provide a limo and that Cokie would have to take taxis around NYC. Oh, the horror! Oh, the shame! How did Cokie ever survive?
(Had she been told to take the subway, one gets the impression Roberts would have called it quits right then.)
A vapid celebration of what appears to be a vapid marriage isn't necessarily shocking -- what's shocking is that Cokie (and husband Steve) put their names to it. Had a child offered this slight volume as a souvenir to a wedding anniversary, we all would have "oooh"ed and "aaaawe"d over it. But for grownups to write such a book about themselves is the height of narcissism.
The book works best as anthropological study of When Gigantic Egos Mate.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Cokie's writing technique is exquisite
Review: Last year, she delighted us with "We are our mother's daughters" in which she told us about her mother and then wrote about some randomly chosen, unconnected women throughout history. Now she teams with her husband to give us the epic, heroic story of their marriage and then write about some randomly chosen, unconnected marriages through history. It is a thoroughly original literary approach which, although totally devoid of anything interesting or informative, suits this over-rated Sunday morning chatterbox exquisitely. Maybe she will grace us with a book about some other family member next year and then write about some randomly chosen, unconnected people who were members of some family. Let us all hope.


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