
American Passage
The History of Ellis Island
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Narrated by:
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Jonathan Hogan
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By:
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Vincent Cannato
About this listen
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Critic reviews
"Using a variety of primary sources, Cannato describes Ellis Island as a place and as an experience....He follows its reincarnation as a detention center for wartime aliens and as a monument and museum, which he admits may celebrate uncritically 'ethnic triumphalism' and upward mobility. Cannato writes that understaffing resulted in only perfunctory screening for mental, physical, and moral traits that might have made newcomers public charges, and he disabuses readers of the fallacy that examiners, rather than steamship officials or immigrants bent on assimilation, changed entrants' last names.....This measured book helps to place in perspective discussions - sure to matter to genealogists and those engaged in political discourse - of Ellis Island and the idea of immigration as a privilege rather than a right. Essential reading." (Frederick J. Augustyn Jr., Library of Congress, School Library Journal)
What listeners say about American Passage
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Lauren
- 05-09-21
Meh
Being able to hear the reader’s breathing is highly irritating. Also the audible chapters are not broken up by the book’s chapters. At least one changed in the middle of a sentence. But I enjoyed the information of the book.
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- Kim Hamacher
- 07-16-15
Overall interesting but a bit rambling at times
Narration is excellent. Story is overall good but author seemed to ramble rather far a field before circling back around to the central story. This is only troublesome due to the book's overall length making it daunting to complete. The epilogue is a bit preachy for me.
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- Joel gore
- 06-16-19
what a great 20 hours spent.
American Passage was a great audio book. The Narration was great as well. I would listen to the Narrator: Jonathon Hogan again he has a great voice for narration. I would have liked about half the book to be more individual and personal stories of the people who passed through Ellis Island the other half to be about immigration law the dealings of them. It did have personal stories of the people who passed Ellis Island but not enough. But all in all it was a great book
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- kv
- 04-13-23
Good Info, but Audio Book Chapters Don’t Line Up w/ Book
Good Info, but Audio Book Chapters Don’t Line Up w/ Book below is a rough chart of where the chapters are
Actual Book Chapter - Audio Book Chapter
Introduction - Ch 1
Ch. 1 - Ch 2 After 3:40 mins
Ch. 2 - Ch. 3
Ch. 3 - Ch. 5
Ch 4 - Ch. 6 After 4:10 mins
Ch. 5 - ?
Ch. 6 - ?
Ch. 7 - Ch. 11
Ch. 8 - Ch. 13
Ch. 9 - Ch. 14 After 12 mins
Ch. 10 - Ch. 16 After 18:50 mins
Ch. 11 - Ch. 18 After 12:30 mins
Ch. 12 - Ch. 20 After 23 mins
Ch. 13 - ?
Ch. 14 - Ch. 25
Ch. 15 - ?
Ch. 16 - Ch. 28
Ch. 17 - ?
Ch. 18 - ?
Ch. 19 - ?
If you find the other ones copy and paste this comment with the rest :) Hope this helps
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- ro_runner
- 03-09-17
Hard to focus
I really thought I would enjoy this book, but found it a dry recount of immigration law. I couldn't stay focused on it & eventually gave up. I may try again another time.
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- Chris Raimondi
- 09-18-24
The lack of insight of the immigrants or the history of Ellis Island itself.
The Story was more about politics than the history of Ellis Island. The narrator's voice was just as boring as the book.
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Overall
- Roger
- 02-22-10
Careful and nuanced
This is a thoroughly researched and balanced narrative. It describes the tensions between America's tradition of welcoming "tired masses yearning to breathe free" and the demands of national sovereignty. It explains how the balance struck between the two conflicting interests has swung back and forth several times during our history. The book also begins some fascinating discussions about the interrelationships between America's attitudes on race and immigration, between civil rights and the treatment of immigrants and between global human rights and the war on terror. Yet Cannato leaves most of these questions hanging, without the fuller analyses that would have made this a great book.
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- Philip B. Galbraith
- 05-03-19
Well Researched And Written. But...
This well researched book is informative and at tines, over informative.
But the reading is awful.
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