Autorenbild.

Jane FondaRezensionen

Autor von My Life So Far

59+ Werke 1,322 Mitglieder 17 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 2 Lesern

Rezensionen

Zeige 17 von 17
 
Gekennzeichnet
BooksInMirror | 11 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 19, 2024 |
Jane Fonda’s What Can I Do?: My Path from Climate Despair to Action describes her activist work focused on the Fire Drill Friday protests she helped organize and lead in 2019. The goal of the Fire Drill Fridays was to “pass a Green New Deal, stop fossil fuel expansion immediately, phase out fossil fuels as soon as possible but definitely within thirty years, secure a fair deal for workers and communities most impacted by the transition” as well as to educate the public (pg. 20). This book helps fulfill that final goal, with chapters devoted to subjects such as local efforts to combat climate change, how it affects sea life, the impact on women and gender relations, and more. Fonda worked to ensure that the Fire Drill Friday protests involved more than the usual older, white male experts, bringing in women, young people, Indigenous leaders, POC, and more to ensure an equitable movement (pg. 178).

Fonda hopes that this work will help dispel the fatalism many in the West feel about climate change, assuming they have any awareness of its true impact at all, by including breakdowns at the end of each chapter about what people can do. Fonda summarizes the work of Yale researcher Anthony Leiserowitz, who studied awareness of climate change and concluded “the three countries where people are the least aware of the climate crisis are the United States, Canada, and the U.K.” because “those are the countries where individualism has taken root the most, especially in the last thirty years, fanned by right-wing news outlets like Fox and other Murdoch-owned media” (pg. 67). Fonda summarizes Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield’s interpretation of national security, namely that “money spent improving the living conditions here at home is national security spending. That, not war, is what makes us safe. How secure is a country where children are being poisoned by toxic fumes in their homes, where we are ill-prepared for a pandemic, where too many can’t afford health care and a decent education, and millions are homeless?” (pgs. 86-87). Describing the threat of climate change to water resources, Fonda writes, “Water is no longer infinite… The UN predicts that by 2050 that lack of access to clean water could affect five billion people, half the planet. We may feel safe here in America, but when the U.S. Government Accountability Office surveyed water managers in 2013, it found that forty out of fifty of them anticipated water shortages by 2023” (pg. 120).

What Can I Do? was published during the COVID-19 pandemic and Fonda writes, “Just about every single thing that this government of ours has done is exactly the opposite of what must happen – with a pandemic or with the climate crisis: denial, lack of preparedness, disregard for science, viewing the federal government as merely a ‘backup.’ This is not a drill! It is a vital teachable moment” (pgs. 209-210). Fonda concludes, “It has become clear to me that the fossil fuel industry is anathema to democracy. We cannot continue to depend on fossil fuels and live in a country that calls itself a democracy… Two-thirds of Americans want our government to pass a binding climate treaty. But in 2013, the fossil fuel industry spent $326 million to persuade congressional Republicans and some Democrats to kill just such a treaty” while fossil fuel industries further spend at the state and local levels to quash any attempts to limit their profiteering and extraction at the expense of health and climate concerns (pg. 260). Fonda’s book serves as both a warning of how dire things have become as well as a roadmap for actions everyday people can take and hopefully help our society survive, minimize, and begin to reverse the effects climate change.
 
Gekennzeichnet
DarthDeverell | Mar 24, 2021 |
L'impegno sociale della battagliera Jane Fonda è diretto ora alla salvaguardia del nostro pianeta.
Una lettura di questo libro è indispensabile, specie a chi è ancora scettico sui danni finora provocati e a quanto poco tempo ci rimanga per salvare l'ambiente, no solo nostro ma soprattutto dei nostri figli e nipoti.
 
Gekennzeichnet
ginsengman | Mar 24, 2021 |
A surprising book. I knew a little bit about Jane Fonda when I started listening to the audiobook so I had a lot to learn. It's always nice to dismantle pre-conceived notions you have of who you think someone is based on the tiny sliver you see of them via media.

The most interesting parts of the book, for me, were when she talked about her activist experiences, particularly when talking to veterans. The Waterbury story was really interesting.

I found that the last 10 minutes of the audiobook, which Fonda read, thank goodness, were really insightful and I wish she had written more. Of course, it may be that at that time in her life, she was starting a new chapter and maybe that will continue in another book!

It's fascinating to me that someone who had such a strong voice in her career, acting roles and activism could shrink so much in her personal life. But I do think that's common so I wasn't surprised per see. I was intrigued and wanted to know more about her life after her relationship with Ted Turner was over. I could have listened to many more chapters on that and on Fonda herself and what she learned. I want to know more about how she found her voice and how she used it.

I'm really glad I read this book. I often wished I had a hard copy so I could underline certain poignant passages, especially toward the end of the book, when Fonda briefly touched upon patriarchy, gender roles and feminism.

---------------------------------------------------------------------
TW: Sexual assault, one brief mention of animal abuse, wartime violence, trauma in childhoods.
 
Gekennzeichnet
coffeefairy | 11 weitere Rezensionen | Nov 21, 2020 |
Excellent, informative read but really LONG.
1 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
FormerEnglishTeacher | 11 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 18, 2018 |
The aura of Jane Fonda as an actor, and an activist, a feminist, and a wife, a daughter, a workout guru, a role model and a soul of style and struggle is as bright as a big star. One of the most loving and inspiring account on how much life can be packed in 60+ years. My Life So Far by Jane Fonda is about woman living a remarkable life on the pages of extraordinary intimacy and private truths. My favourite biography.½
 
Gekennzeichnet
dimplesrao | 11 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 21, 2018 |
I loved Jane Fonda before and was hooked on her honest memoir about so many things I didn't realize about her. Great book.
 
Gekennzeichnet
vickiayala | 11 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 22, 2016 |
Mielestäni mielenkiintoisinta Jane Fonda -opastaa teoksessa eivät suinkaan ole jumppaohjeet, vaan Jane Fondan elämä elokuvatähtenä. Fonda kirjoittaa teoksen alussa elimistönsä väärinkäytöstä ja siitä kuinka malli- ja näyttelijäpiireissä laihdutettiin muun muassa amfetamiinin, oksentelun ja diureettien voimin. Sittemmin terveysherätyksen saanut Fonda kertoo anekdootin siitä, kuinka Katharine Hepburn sai hänet ylittämään itsensä ja hyppäämään voltin jääkylmään järveen Kultalammen kuvauksissa. Niille joita teoksen jumppaohjeet kiinnostavat kerrottakoon, että ohjeita löytyy niin aloittelijoille kuin edistyneillekin.
 
Gekennzeichnet
Maria1888 | Dec 16, 2015 |
Fonda opened up about her childhood, first loves and marriage, and her activism in the anti-war campaign during Vietnam. However, that's where she ended her story, but that really wasn't her life so far even at the time of publishing. Left me wondering where the rest of her life went and wanting to know about it. Fonda is straight forward and a decent writer.½
 
Gekennzeichnet
Amethyst26 | 11 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 23, 2012 |
Fonda covers her accomplished public life (two Academy Awards) while also showing how her addictive personality caused her to make life choices which hindered her own long sought desire for self-fulfillment. The book is not flattering but shows her attempt to accept her many flaws. These flaws would be glaring and almost unimaginable to most American women.
I read this to weigh her opinion of her Hanoi misadventure. She still maintains that she has no regrets over having gone to protest the war, just regrets about being a “novice” revolutionary who was miscast as wanting the US to lose the war and wanting “us” to be killed. She does regret having the photo taken on the AAA site wearing a helmet. She does regret that her actions appeared callus with regard to U.S. soldiers. There are other statements she makes that strain credulity. She says that she did not cause anyone to be tortured, that torture had stopped by 1969, and that torture was not the policy of the North Vietnamese government. A large number of U.S. POW memoirs will say that these statements were false. The POWs speak about the torturers saying that they (the POWs) were receiving “lenient treatment” for their crimes, as they were being tortured. She claims the CIA, FBI, NSA and DIA all had files on her after her trip.
Strangely enough, I found Fonda’s book interesting even as I felt sorrow for her shallow understanding of her personal situations. She says, for instance, how impressed she was that Ted Turner rewrote the 10 commandments! She also wrongly believes that the gnostic gospels were written during the formation of the New Testament canon. However, I salute her desire to live a life of searching for her own spiritual connection to God, even if it did imbalance a marriage she enjoyed. This is a book especially for women, and women interested in self-empowerment.
 
Gekennzeichnet
sacredheart25 | 11 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 13, 2012 |
A well written and interesting tale that became tedious at times because of the author's tendency to ramble. At 584 pages it was far too long. With some slick editing this would have been an excellent read as the content especially around the Vietnam conflict time was most interesting.
1 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
GeniAus. | 11 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 27, 2009 |
Fonda recommends taking advantage of fresh, seasonal ingredients for optimum flavor. Layout is consistent. A photo is included with every recipe.
 
Gekennzeichnet
readit2 | Sep 1, 2008 |
Finished May 5, 2005

The Lord knows His own. More properly, I suppose, He knows everyone, but I mean by my opening that He uses that which is part of our personal being to reach us -- His methods individualized for each one of us.

On several imporant occasions in my life He has conveyed His mesasge to me via books -- books which I had no intention of reading, books which I assumed beforehand would be either stupid or fluffy, or both.

That is the case with this one. I idly read the book jacket flaps while waiting at Borders to have coffee with a friend. It interested me enough to get a copy out of the library. Then i saw Jane on The Actors' Studio and was blown away by her honesty, and her experience of life as a repressed woman.

Her wounding childhood and the weakness to which many women are prone, that of non-self-confidence, produced a person who continuously shut down her own self and her true voice in order to get or to retain love and approval

I was stunned to find this to be true of a woman I had peceived to be strong, outpsoken, talented, rich and beautiful. And, most important to me, she began to look for and to choose her own voice when she was 60.

So, while not great literature, this book is an honest, moving, encouraging, and enlightening account of struggle and search. I liked it well enough to buy two copies, one for me and one for my daughter.

I have also been struck by the great quotations Jane uses,and have purchased several of the authors she recommends.

Happily surprised, I have both enjoyed and benefited from a book which I initially perceived as the autobiography of a movie star, something in which normally I would have no interest at all.
1 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
Kathleen828 | 11 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 30, 2008 |
This book is as amazing a resource now as it was when it was first released. I didn't get into all of Fonda's other exercise tapes, etc. but this book is about more than that. It's about aging as a woman. It was my Mom's when it was brand new. With my mother's death last year, it became mine. Flipping through it now, I realize it's perfect for me at this point in my life. One reason I rarely ever part with a book. Books, just like our lives, have seasons.
 
Gekennzeichnet
janehutchi | Jun 15, 2007 |
Although, I am not a huge fan of Jane Fonda's I find her book very interesting and engaging. I ordered the book out of curiosity and am glad I did. Her childhood does explain (but not excuse by any means) her actions and attitudes as an adult.
1 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
Karbie | 11 weitere Rezensionen | May 30, 2007 |
Not an elegant, literary writer but a forceful, honest one. Some readers may not take to the digested self-analysis served up by Ms Fonda but I took it in the same vein that I think it was given - the desire to be honest about her life and the meaning she has made of it.
Made me want to go and watch all her films.
1 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
steve.voidstar | 11 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 2, 2007 |
Not yet read.
 
Gekennzeichnet
majorbabs | 11 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 4, 2008 |
Zeige 17 von 17