Margaret Bourke-White, A Photographer's Life

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Margaret Bourke-White, A Photographer's Life
A well-written, factual and fluid biography...insightful, interesting, carefully researched.--School Library Journal

A balanced portrait of Bourke-White as...an artist of great ambition. A good taste of how unique those photographs were, how striking they still are, and what an extraordinary woman it was who made them.
--The Plain Dealer

Keller writes with sensitivity about Bourke-White's pursuit of artistry, career and personal well being. A solid introduction to a pivotal 20th century woman.
--San Francisco Chronicle

Useful as a biography or for a history class--students will enjoy it.--Ohio Children's Book Review

Excellent, informative for all age levels.--Maine Examination of Young Adult Books


Several poems and articles were published in newspapers such as The Buffalo News, Hartford Courant and Columbus Dispatch and also in literary magazines such as Confrontation, descant, Ellipsis, The New Renaissance, Phoebe, Kansas Quarterly, et al.

An interview with acclaimed poet Robert Creeley appeared in the American Poetry Review.

My Works

FRANCES PERKINS, FIRST WOMAN CABINET MEMBER

When news of Perkins death reached Washington, Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz paid his predecessor a most fitting tribute: 'Every man and woman in America who works at a living wage, under safe conditions, for reasonable hours, or who is protected by unemployment insurance or Social Security
is Frances Perkins' debtor.'
In a speech to the nation in August 1938, the third anniversary of the Social Security Act, President Roosevelt reflected on the program's beginnings. 'This third anniversary would not be complete if I did not express the gratitude of the nation to those who helped me in making social security legislation possible...First of all, to the first woman who has ever sat in the cabinet of the United States, Miss Perkins..."

Recently Published--Frances Perkins, First Woman Cabinet Member
Perkins began working as a social reformer, challenging manufacturers and politicians and championing workers' rights. At the start of the Great Depression, U. S. President F. D. Roosevelt asked her to join his cabinet as secretary of labor. Together they developed progressive plans to revive America's economy which included unemployment insurance, workmen's compensation and social security.

Both Margaret Bourke-White and Frances Perkins are valuable portraits of people and events that were prominent in the 20s, 30s, 40s, and 50s in our country's history.

Margaret Bourke-White, A Photographer's Life
The middle part of the 20th century was a rich time in U. S. history, and Margaret Bourke-White photographed the major events of the day. She showed Americans the beauty of industry and its machinery in the 1920s, documented poverty and suffering during the Great Depression in the 1930s, and brought home the war in
the 1940s.

The biography contains 169 reprints of Margaret Bourke-White's famous photos, including those of the photographer herself, more than any other biography.

The book won a Voice of Youth Advocates Young Adults Library Services Association Placement on the Honor List for Outstanding Nonfiction.

Margaret Bourke-White Photographs Manhattan from the tower of the Chrysler Building in 1930


Selected Works

Biography
Margaret Bourke-White, A Photographer's Life
A biography of Life magazine's original photographer.



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