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"Watts' account of the Age of Disney hits the
bullseye."—Newsday
"A very thoughtful, reasoned, and entertaining view of a great
American success story--two brothers from the Middle West who came
to symbolize everything good about America."—Roy Disney
"Gives us a vivid portrait of the man behind Mickey Mouse, while at the same
time situating his anomalous achievement within a social and esthetic context. .
. . A terrifically readable and illuminating book."—New York Times
"An invaluable mine of material on how the American century became the Disney
century."—Los Angeles Times
"Reveals why the man who created Mickey Mouse reigns as one of the most
important cultural influences of the 20th century. [Written in] a lively,
accessible tone."—USA Today
"The first truly balanced account of Walt Disney's life and work.
Fascinatingly detailed, intellectually vigorous, and candid,
Watts's exhaustive research presents a human portrait of this
extraordinary `ordinary' man and his profound influence on American
culture."—John Canemaker, author of Treasures of Disney
Animation Art and Before the Animation Begins: The Art and Lives
of Disney Inspiration Sketch Artists
"Forcefully and cogently argued, it does an excellent job of tying
together all of the facets—artistic, commercial, and personal—of
the Disney saga. . . . This valuable, unique book will be valued
by fans, cynics, and semioticians alike."
—Booklist
"A captivating portrait of a complicated man."—St. Louis Post-
Dispatch
"Requires us to acknowledge two essential truths that are easy to forget: That
where Disney ended up is not where he began and that his stupendous success
arose from . . . his heartfelt understanding of and sympathy with `average
Americans and their hopes, fears, and values'"—Washington Post
"Steve Watts is both a scholar and a Disneyphile, which makes him
an ideal author for this much-neded volume about Walt Disney's
place in American culture. It told me things I didn't know before,
but even more important, it made me think about things I already knew."—Leonard Maltin, author of The Disney
Films
"The Magic Kingdom is a most impressive achievement. . . .
More than a first-rate biography, this extraordinarily lucid book-
-a work at once of genuine empathy and unsparing criticism—is
cultural history at its best."—Robert Westbrook, author of John
Dewey and American Democracy
"As true a picture as I could have imagined."—Fess Parker
"This exhaustively researched and remarkably judicious volume should remain our
best source on Walt Disney and his manifold enterprises for many years to
come."—Journal of American
History
"This lively, witty, and insightful study is likely to become a standard."—Library Journal
"Mr. Watts is to be congratulated for producing a subtle, generous-minded
account of [the Disney] legacy, and for reminding readers, after so much
Disney-bashing, that there was a bright as well as a dark side to the magic
kingdom."
—The Economist
"The most responsible and comprehensive book on Disney's relationship to
American culture in a long while."
—Seattle
Times
"An immensely thorough, thoughtful survey and syntheses of some sixty years of
commentary about Disney, intertwined with Watts' own remarkable perceptive
assessments."—Cleveland Plain
Dealer
"Relying on a mountain of archival and interview material, Watts does a
masterful job of keeping the sometimes contradictory strands of Disney's life
and work together."—Milwaukee Journal
Sentinel
"A thoughtful and well-researched biography . . . which also provides a starting
point for thinking about the Disney legacy today."—Commentary
"A fine example of academic research that is fully accessible to a nonacademic
audience."—Dallas Morning News
"An admirable even-handed work. . . . Stands well above the current,
permissively silly academic standards for the discussion of pop culture. . . . A
new perspective."—Washingtonian
Monthly
About the Author
Steven Watts is Chairman of the History Department at the
University of Missouri-Columbia. He is the author of several books,
including The Republic Reborn: War and the Making of Liberal
America, 1790-1820.
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