Join Books.org — it's free

African Americans - Biography, Children - Politics, Government & Law, Children - Biography
Barack Obama by Kerrily Sapet β€” book cover

Barack Obama

by Kerrily Sapet
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

In February 2007, Illinois senator Barack Obama announced that he would run for president in 2008. He was largely unknown and had only been in the U.S. Senate since 2004. Yet many believe he stands a strong chance of becoming the Democratic Presidential Nominee in 2008, as well as the first African American with a realistic chance of winning the office. But who is Barack Obama?

Barack Obama was named for a father he barely knew, a Kenyan doctor and scholar. Raised by his devoted mother and grandparents in Hawaii and Indonesia, young Barry was exposed to different cultures and religions. He attended a prestigious prep school where he became a star basketball player. But the half-black, half-white young man never felt that he truly belonged and was haunted by the legacy of the father he only met once.

Obama's search for meaning and identity led him to Kenya, where he reconnected with his African family. He then went on to Harvard Law School and eventually to Chicago, where he discovered a cause worth fighting and living for: the cause of social justice. Barack Obama's journey has prepared him to fight for what he believes and transformed "the skinny kid with big ears and a funny name" into a man who might change the face of American politics.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

School Library Journal

Gr 5-8
This serviceable, but not stellar, biography of the Illinois senator will probably be dated before it hits library shelves. It follows the usual series formula of anecdote followed by chatty narration. ("He kept Michelle in his heart though, and knew he would return to Chicago . . . .When he graduated, opulent law firms flung their doors open to him.") Full-color photos appear throughout; many are relevant but others are merely filler-an aerial view of Chicago's coastline, a "Colored" water fountain, asbestos fibers, and more. This book is longer than Marlene Targ Brill's Barack Obama: Working to Make a Difference (Millbrook, 2006) though not necessarily more useful or readable.
β€”Linda BeckCopyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
June 9, 2026
Publisher
Morgan Reynolds Pub
Pages
128
Format
Binding
ISBN
9781599350455

More by Kerrily Sapet

Similar books