| Michelle
Obama: Meet the First Lady
Click to order via
Amazon
by David Bergen Brophy
Reading level: Ages 9-12
Hardcover: 128 pages
Publisher: Collins (January 6, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0061779911
ISBN-13: 978-0061779916
Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.6 x 0.7 inches
Book Review by
Kam Williams
“A tall 44 year-old African-American woman took her place
at the podium and began her speech at the Democratic
National Convention. As the 4,500 people in attendance
listened along with millions of prime-time television
watchers at home, the woman who would be the first
African-American First Lady in U.S. history began to tell
her story. ‘Each of us,’ Michelle LaVaughn Robinson Obama
said, ‘comes here tonight by way of our own improbable
journey.’
This is the story of Michelle Obama’s journey.”
—Excerpted from The Prologue (page 1)
Apparently, in anticipation of Barack Obama’s historic win,
it occurred to lots of authors to get a head start on a
biography of his wife, since she hadn’t yet written one herself.
Michelle Obama: Meet the First Lady, designed with the 8
to 12 year-old demographic in mind, wins the race in terms of
adolescents, and does a decent job in covering considerable
ground in about 100 pages.
After an overview of her hometown, Chicago, we learn about
that Michelle inherited her enviable work ethic from her
parents, Fraser and Marian Robinson. Her dad spent his entire
career with the city’s water department, although he was also a
precinct captain who helped to get out the vote for the
Democratic Party. Her mother was employed as a secretary until
she had children and decided to devote herself to her kids
full-time.
Michelle only had one sibling, her big brother Craig, an
admired role model whose footsteps she would follow to Princeton
University. Despite his presence on campus, she apparently still
felt “like an outsider,” especially because when she arrived as
a freshman “the mother of one of her white roommates rushed to
the campus housing office to demand that her daughter be moved
immediately.”
However, Michelle got the last laugh, graduating with honors
before moving on to Harvard Law School. There, she studied under
noted African-American attorney Charles Ogletree who remembers
her as “brilliant” while another professor, David Wilkins,
recalled her as “decisive.”
The readers curious about romance might most enjoy the
chapter recounting how Michelle met Barack. There she admits to
being a little skeptical about this brother who “sounded too
good to be true.” But his persistence ultimately paid off with a
wonderful marriage which would be blessed with two beautiful
daughters, Malia, now 10, and Sasha, 7.
The book also covers the presidential campaign before closing
with Michelle musing about what life will be like after the
inauguration on January 20th. “My immediate priority will be to
make the White House a home for our daughters,” she admits.
“It’s going to be a big change for them, and they are going to
need my full attention.”
Sounds like the girls are going to be fine, given that their
mom hasn’t forgotten what matters most. Overall, pleasant and
informative enough to engage any youngster curious about the
sort of challenges encountered and overcome by Michelle Obama en
route to becoming First Lady.
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