Book Descriptions
for Restless Spirit by Elizabeth Partridge
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
From the spirited, life-embracing black-and-white image of Dorothea Lange on the title page to the many striking reproductions of her powerful and socially relevant photographs to the illuminating text, this biography of the pioneering photographer is stimulating both visually and intellectually. As a child, author Elizabeth Partridge knew Dorothea Lange--both her grandfather and her father worked with Lange and the Partridges were part of Lange's close circle of friends and family. In researching this biography Elizabeth Partridge interviewed a number of those family members and friends in addition to drawing on a large body of published material to compose an insightful and inspiring portrait of Lange for young readers. Lange is seen as a sensitive, passionate child who realized from a young age that she saw and felt things more deeply than many other people. Determined to learn photography, as a financially struggling college student she walked into the studio of one of the best-known photographers in New York City and asked for a job. She learned how to take portraits, but it was with the onset of the Depression that she embarked on her life's work, taking pictures of everyday people, letting their dignity, their beauty, and sometimes their tragedy rise from the image, whether she was photographing destitute men in a bread line in California, a young black sharecropper in the South, or Japanese Americans who had been interned by the U.S. government. Especially in her earlier years but throughout her career, Lange struggled to maintain a balance between her personal and professional lives, sometimes sacrificing her art for the sake of her first husband's career and her children, and sometimes making the difficult choice to put her own needs first. Partridge astutely makes clear that every choice had its price to pay for all involved in this fine biography that lets the complex character and deep compassion of Dorothea Lange breathe freely on its pages. (Age 11 and older)
CCBC Choices 1998. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 1998. Used with permission.
From The Jane Addams Children's Book Award
With the narrative pace of a novel, yet not fictionalized, this biography of one the most respected U.S. photographers is intimate and informed. Over 65 of Lange's photographs, including her most famous from the Great Depression and the Japanese internment camps, visually represent her impressive career, a career that often clashed with society's expectations of "woman's role."
The Jane Addams Children's Book Award: Honoring Peace and Social Justice in Children's Books Since 1953. © Scarecrow Press, 2013. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
Dorothea Lange's desperate and beautiful photographs of migrant workers during the Great Depression and her heartbreaking images of Japanese Americans interned during World War II put human faces on some of the darkest episodes in America's history. But this free spirit from Hoboken, New Jersey, never forgot that she chose to work as a photographer at a time when family was supposed to come first for a woman. Restless Spirit: The Life and Work of Dorothea Lange is an intimate portrait of a woman who struggled to balance her passion for her career and her love for her family, all the while producing some of the most celebrated, powerful photographic works in America's history.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.