"We need these stories. We need to read them to our children and our grandchildren."
--Dennis Prager
"We learn by stories, and this powerful, well-written book gives us forty superb ones. They couldn't be more timely in an age that is experiencing too much bluster, blather, exhibitionism, and ignorance."
--Steve Forbes
What makes someone a hero?
Is it fame, power, money, creative talent, athletic ability, good looks?
Despite what our culture typically celebrates, none of those things makes a hero.
No, heroism springs from character, the critical element that defines a person. The good news is that character is something every one of us can mold; it is simply the sum of the choices we make as we face new challenges and opportunities.
And here's even better news: this lively, accessible book gives you real, flesh-and-blood models of character, courage, and conviction--men and women you won't just admire but also can emulate.
Author Lawrence W. Reed ranges far and wide in Real Heroes--from major historical figures to remarkable people you've never heard of; from the distant past to the present; from the United States, to Europe, to Asia; from statesmen to scientists, athletes to inventors, entrepreneurs to theologians, writers to teachers. Reed's heroes include:
- The nineteenth-century American educator who was vilified and threatened for daring to teach black girls
- The unsung British activist who fought for decades to end slavery
- The courageous Cambodian who alerted the world to Pol Pot's killing fields
- The Polish soldier who volunteered to go to the notorious concentration camp Auschwitz to expose Nazi brutality and defend the liberty of his people
Concise and compelling, Real Heroes highlights memorable quotations from each hero and features a bulleted summary of lessons at the end of each profile.
We desperately need more heroes today. America is a country with a proud history of heroes, but now it seems we've forgotten more of them than we're producing.
It's time to change that. And Real Heroes is here to help.
About the Author: Lawrence W. Reed is the president of the Foundation for Economic Education (FEE) and the author or editor of several books, including Excuse Me, Professor: Challenging the Myths of Progressivism. Before joining FEE, he served as president of the Mackinac Center for Public Policy in Midland, Michigan, and chaired Northwood University's department of economics. Reed has written some 1,500 articles for newspapers and magazines worldwide. He is a frequent guest on radio and television.