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Lanterns: A Memoir of Mentors

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“All who love children are served generously and intelligently by the ideas, commitments, and passion of Marian Wright Edelman. Her arms are open to the children and adults of the world, and we all are stronger and more safe because of her.” — Maya Angelou Throughout her life and work, Marian Wright Edelman has been at the heart of this century's most dramatic civil rights and child advocacy struggles. In this stirring, heartfelt memoir she pays tribute to the extraordinary mentors who helped light her way including Martin Luther King, Jr., Robert F. Kennedy, Fannie Lou Hamer, and William Sloane Coffin. She celebrates the lives of her parents and the great Black Women of Bennettsville, South Carolina—Miz Tee, Miz Lucy, Miz Kate—who gave her love and guidance in her youth, as well as the many teachers and figures who inspired her education at Spelman College and empowered her early as an activist in the 1960's. Illustrated with many of the author's personal photographs,  Lanterns  also includes a "Parents' Pledge" and "Twenty-Five More Lessons for Life" to guide, protect, and love our children every day so that they will become, in Edelman's moving vision, the healing agents for national transformation.

208 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1999

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About the author

Marian Wright Edelman

55 books61 followers
Marian Wright Edelman is an American activist for children's rights. She has been an advocate for disadvantaged Americans for her entire professional life. She is founder and president emerita of the Children's Defense Fund. She influenced leaders such as Martin Luther King Jr. and Hillary Clinton.

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Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Antonia.
138 reviews40 followers
February 3, 2023
Worthwhile read. Some opinions are definitely outdated, but it was published in 1999.
Profile Image for Josiah Hatfield.
102 reviews3 followers
December 28, 2019
Insightful, powerful, and charming memoir told through the lens of mentor figures for Edelman. She cites mentors near (parents) and far (historical figures), specific (four community leaders) and broad (children). Edelman has done much for this country, children, and the civil rights movement. This one is certainly a good read.
501 reviews3 followers
January 9, 2022
This book has been a part of my personal library since April 2000. Reading it now I find it as relevant today as it was 20 years ago and more needed than ever. It marks America’s growth over the past 20 years and leaves us the message that we need to turn our attention back to what is most important, our children.
805 reviews
April 9, 2020
When she was writing about specific people who impacted her early life her writing was very powerful & inspiring, but it was decidedly less so in the latter half of the book when she wrote more about causes
2,701 reviews
April 3, 2020
I love her writing style. The mentors she discusses in the book taught her how to be a good person, not just a wonderful scholar and activist.
Profile Image for Diann Blakely.
Author 9 books49 followers
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December 1, 2011
Longtime activist Edelman generously structures her material around iconic beacons like Martin Luther King, Robert Kennedy, Sojourner Truth, and the female elders of Bennettsville, S.C., where Edelman grew up in the 1940s. Intentionally didactic, and strictly chronological, LANTERNS improvises on the traditional biographical sketch, religious meditation, and social exposé; and it also includes journal excerpts.

Edelman, now president of the Children’s Defense Fund, initially gained recognition in the early 1960s, when she became the first female attorney admitted to the Mississippi bar; she was only the fourth black lawyer practicing in the entire state during the Freedom Summer of 1964. Working for the civil rights movement was risky for everyone involved, but Edelman’s chronicle of Klan horrors employs a theme-and-variations approach that pays tribute to the resiliency of the individual, in particular the anonymous African-American women she met in the Delta. Mae Bertha Carter, for example, isn’t generalized into a symbol but “lit” by her own special flame, which Edelman describes.

Edelman’s story reminds us that children usually suffer most in troubled times: Carter’s daughters and sons, living in a house that was shot into on a regular basis, became so terrified of night snipers that they refused to sleep anywhere but the floor for many years. But an even more poignant—and telling—moment in LANTERNS occurs when Edelman tries to describe the piled children’s shoes she sees on a later visit to Auschwitz. The shoes represent an evil largely untouched by the sort of activism that marked the civil rights movement; Edelman can sustain the description for only two sentences before cutting to a cheerier scene, in which an angry white mob of Mississippians is defused by the gospel song “This Little Light of Mine.” Inspiring this episode might be, but it also underscores both the metaphorical and practical limitations of gospel music—and, by extension, the limits of Edelman’s own memoir. At times it refuses altogether the blues’ darker notes, as Albert Murray would say, leading paradoxically to an inability to contemplate—much less pity—those caught most helplessly in history’s flames.


(originally published in the NASHVILLE SCENE)
Profile Image for Daniel L..
250 reviews15 followers
July 25, 2013
Enlightening!

For centuries sailors have relied on the constellations of heavenly lanterns to guide their way. In crisp, vivid prose, Marian Wright Edelman tells us about the heroes who provided beacons of hope and inspiration, helping her find her way through the many moral dillemas of life and stay on course.

What is interesting is the sheer variety of backgrounds Dr. Edelman's heroes have. Nevertheless, they all share the author's passion for human rights and social justice. As a bonus, Dr. Edelman gives a brief history of the civil rights era, a nice complement to two other fine books on that fascinating topic, Taylor Branch's "Parting the Waters" and David Halberstam's "The Children."

This book is much more a memoir. It is a call of action and an inspiration for all of us to act for the common good, to serve the community. It is up to the current generations to act as a positive role model for the next, much as Dr. Edelman's mentors did for her.

Mentors, lanterns, are important at all times, during the economic boom of the late 1990s, when this book was written, as well as in the troubled initial years of the 21st century. Ms. Edelman currently writes an excellent column in the Huffington Post. There are already too many ships out there lacking a sailor to read the stars. And some ships don't even have a rudder.
Profile Image for Crystal.
34 reviews
October 22, 2013
This book came along at the right time! I loved how Mrs. Wright-Edelman chronicled key American historical events through her mentors. She is inspirational, her mentors are inspirational, I was completely inspired!
Profile Image for Kendra.
110 reviews
March 8, 2009
For discussion in a Leadership Bookgroup...may also try to read: Measure of Success, which was given to me by a mentor but I never actually finished.
Profile Image for Sara.
47 reviews
September 24, 2010
How many of us have so many other people that thankfully helped us become who we are and who we will become.
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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