Dispatches from the Edge: A Memoir of War, Disasters, and Survival
by Anderson Cooper
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strong-influence
Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
my cynical friends
I ordered this book because I had read something written by Anderson Cooper, the human being, intertwined with his life as a journalist. It struck me as one of the most incredibly well-woven pieces of personal and public history I had ever read. It is called My brother's suicide, but it is so much more than a story of private pain. It is about our struggle in living each day.
[http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/08/...index.html]...more
[http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/08/...index.html]...more
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Read in April, 2008
recommends it for:
anyone and everyone
i had been looking for a copy of this book for a long time before i finally got to read it. it is the kind of book that can be devoured in a day or two. usually non-fiction doesn't move me but 'dispatches from the edge' really got to me. i would pick it up and then force myself to set it down to really absorb what i was reading. i didn't want it to end.
this is the kind of book where i [happily] feel like i have to read through it a second time to really get a grip on everything that is goin...more
this is the kind of book where i [happily] feel like i have to read through it a second time to really get a grip on everything that is goin...more
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This is the story of how a little boy's heart broke, so that he decided to bury the pain deep within. Little did he know that you cannot bury one feeling without burying most others as well. Carrying this well of pent-up emotions, feeling cut off, he spent years going to the worse places on earth, hoping to learn how other people dealt with overwhelming pain, and how they survived it. He frantically ran away from his internal demons by facing death and loss in their worse forms, and only the mos...more
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bookshelves:
biographies,
new_orleans
Read in October, 2006
Anderson Cooper has been reporting from the front lines of many different disasters for a while now and this book brings together many of his most vivid experiences. It also interjects occasional tidbits from his younger life which I found really enjoyable, although sad.
I'll be honest, I was drawn to this book because AC wrote about Hurricane Katrina. I've been in correspondence with him before through his blog and it seems many times that he is one of the only media representatives out th...more
I'll be honest, I was drawn to this book because AC wrote about Hurricane Katrina. I've been in correspondence with him before through his blog and it seems many times that he is one of the only media representatives out th...more
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bookshelves:
fondmemories
Read in June, 2007
recommends it for:
anyone interested in world events
Cooper paints a sad picture of some elements in our world. As a reporter for CNN he has been in the unique experience to see some strange, sad things. His discussion of Katrina was riveting and made me angry, all over again. I have to say, however, that Cooper writes in a way that he knows makes him sound cool, but he tries to downplay that self-promotion. Its strange, but its there. Or maybe I'm just jealous. After all, Cooper was able to rely on his families money (I am filling in the blan...more
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Read in January, 2008
After moving to Atlanta and visiting CNN, the home of NEWS, I found this book prominently featured in the CNN shop about my favorite anchor, Anderson Cooper - I have followed his remarkable journey since his days on Channel One as a "cub reporter" to present day as a hard-news roving journalist. His reputation precedes him - what I love so far is his relation of the news and the parallels he draws to his own life- living in the shadow of fame as Gloria Vanderbilt's son, losing his fat...more
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Read in May, 2007
Is Anderson Cooper REALLY gay? It seems like I have heard this from different people. And if so, oh god. What a tragic waste of beautiful manflesh.
...Oh wait. I should be talking about his book, not his devastatingly handsome looks. Whoops! See what college education has done for women?
Dispatches from the edge was a very...not edgy book. Entertaining and enlightening perhaps, but but it is more likely to be that to someone who does not listen to NPR or BBC, or just does not know w...more
...Oh wait. I should be talking about his book, not his devastatingly handsome looks. Whoops! See what college education has done for women?
Dispatches from the edge was a very...not edgy book. Entertaining and enlightening perhaps, but but it is more likely to be that to someone who does not listen to NPR or BBC, or just does not know w...more
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Very well written, very nicely told. I found Anderson Cooper to be a very real person. For someone born into a very famous and affluent family, he has no grandiose, ostentatious or pretentious airs about him. He is a very humble man and it comes across in his writing. As a journalist, it is obvious the things that he has been witness to have had a huge impact on him. I "got" the symmetry between the vignettes of his childhood and the impact that the catastrophes he spoke about had...more
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Read in January, 2008
recommended to Beth Anne by:
anderson cooper, duh.
i'll admit it. i love anderson cooper. not only do i think his show is awesome, but i have a secret (not so secret) crush on him.
that being said...i liked this book. it was a very quick read for me. i read it in three hours of my flight to Los Angeles. it was exactly what i expected. i could hear anderson's voice narrating in my head. it was written exactly as he speaks on the show...so....it wasn't a disappointment.
there was a lot of his "personal" history interspersed in...more
that being said...i liked this book. it was a very quick read for me. i read it in three hours of my flight to Los Angeles. it was exactly what i expected. i could hear anderson's voice narrating in my head. it was written exactly as he speaks on the show...so....it wasn't a disappointment.
there was a lot of his "personal" history interspersed in...more
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Read in August, 2007
It was good, although at times all of his assignments sort of blurred together (although that might have been kind of his point) and I found the personal stories about his childhood to be much more interesting and so poignantly sad, I wish he'd focused more on them. Incidentally, I half-heartedly made it my New Years' Resolution to figure out whether or not Anderson Cooper was gay, and then never watched the show again. Well, after reading this book, there's no doubt in my mind. My favorite piec...more
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A very good read. I craved more about himself and his life in the Vanderbilt family. He's so stable compared to what his mother "poor little Gloria" went through in her childhood being kept away from her mother and ignored in a world of rich self-indulgent adults. For thosse interested in writing as an art form, his tips on reporting are very good about resisting sentimentality and sensationalism, while keeping compassionate. It's also revealing about the life of a journalist day to da...more
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Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
AC 360 fans
Anderson Cooper is polished but not pompous, direct but not intimidating, congenial but not a pushover - so it was no surprise to me that his autobiography has the same qualities. His compelling first hand narratives of human suffering worldwide are by themselves fascinating, but it is only part of his story. In this book, he turns the camera lens of scrutiny onto himself to share with the world some deeply personal vignettes and inner demons that explain why he would rather chase tough storie...more
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Sadly I could not give the most handsome news reporter on television the highest of reviews. At times, Cooper excels as a reporter, delving deep into an issue and staying with it when others have moved on. I think that is apparent in his book as well as his program that often focuses on the lasting effects of Hurricane Katrina and the many government issues and health crises that plague Africa. What I liked about this book is a sort of "behind the scenes" view of what happens as a news...more
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Read in January, 2007
This book gave me newfound respect for Anderson Cooper. I'd always thought of him as something of a "lightweight" in terms of journalism. He's Gloria Vanderbilt's son, after all, and has been known to cover wars and natural disasters while clothed in Prada and Gucci. This memoir offered a glimpse into his life, his childhood, and how the loss of his father and brother shaped his outlook.
There are moving chapters about what he has seen and reported in Africa, but the most jarring ...more
There are moving chapters about what he has seen and reported in Africa, but the most jarring ...more
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Read in September, 2007
I love Anderson Cooper! It's a little disapointing that he is probably gay. Anyhow, this book explores his experiences growing up in the spotlight as the son of Gloria Vanderbuilt, compared to his experiences as a reporter on the scenes of major events such as the recent tsunami and Katrina. I love how he compares himself to a shark, always running after "blood" or the addiction to excitment he feels about being in the center of world events as they unfold. I learned so much through...more
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I have always been a fan of Anderson Cooper since seeing him report on Hurricane Katrina. His reports were always full of sincere emotion and he was determined that the public know how slow the rescue effort was to get started. Reading this book, I was amazed at the different experiences he has had reporting on disaster and wars- Srajevo, Iraq, Somalia, New Oeleans, and the 2004 tsunami. He has a great compassion for people which has driven him to jump righ tinto the thick of things no matter...more
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Read in January, 2007
I checked out this book because I think Anderson Cooper is so good looking! Some people have said my husband looks like him....and of course, I think my husband is handsome, too!!! Funny what makes you choose a book, huh? Anyway, this turned out to be a pretty good non-fiction book about Anderson's experiences as a TV journalist on assignment to some of the worst disasters in the world....Somalia, the Tsunami, Hurricane Katrina....and how they each affected him. Interesting also, are his &qu...more
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I have to agree with Gwen. I really enjoyed it, but the constant hoppping around in time occasionally made me feel like I was trapped in an episode of Lost. Am I in the past, the future or the present? I have heard from some people that it is a very impersonal book, but I disagree. You learn about events in his past that have made him into the man he is today. Maybe he doesn't go into who he is dating, not that I imagine he has much time for that, but finding out why someone is who they are...more
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bookshelves:
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Read in February, 2008
The only thing I knew aout Anderson Cooper before picking up this book was that he's that grey-haired news anchor whose face I wouldn't mind seeing a little more often, know what I mean? So I was shocked to find out about his famous and tragic past (yes, apparently I missed that episode of Oprah). This book did a great job of opening my eyes a bit more to the sorrows happening around the world, and it was fascinating to learn how Cooper lost himself in the carnage in order to learn once again ...more
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Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
people who like themselves as much as Anderson Cooper
When trying to describe this book to my friends, I said that the news stories he talks about are very intersting, and I was surprised what a sad life he's led. But I also notice a great deal of his ego here, and that's a huge turn-off. He keeps claiming how detached he is/was due to his emotional scarring over his father's death and brother's suicide--as though that makes him a better reporter/journalist. But to me, it only paints him as "above" those he's reporting. It's not overt, no...more
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book data (includes all editions)
avg rating (all editions): 3.87 (916 ratings) avg rating (this edition): 3.86 (713 ratings) number of reviews: 226popular shelves
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"Each child’s story is worthy of telling. There shouldn’t be a sliding scale of death. The weight of it is crushing."
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