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If I Live to Be 100

Lessons from the Centenarians

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
If I Live to Be 100 is based on One Hundred Years of Stories, a series of profiles of American centenarians, which Ellis produced and which aired in 2000 on NPR's Morning Edition. There are now more 100-year-olds alive than at any other time in history, and longevity studies are finding many of them are active, healthy and engaged with the world around them. Neenah Ellis set out to meet these people and to hear what insights, memories, wisdom and just plain common sense tips they have to offer. What she's found will surprise you. The original radio profiles will be intercut with Ellis's reading of her book. If I Live to be 100 is not simply a transcript of the radio series, but about how the experience of meeting and talking with these amazing centenarians affected the author.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Neenah Ellis originally interviewed centenarians for a series of NPR reports. Among the people she found still active at age 100 are a professor, a black lesbian, a preacher, and a married couple. Their stories are always fascinating, and the last disc contains the original NPR segments featuring the centenarians' own voices. Ellis's quest, she explains, was a personal one. She has long wondered what her life would be like at age 100. My main quibble is that the interviews are grouped at the end, when they might have been more powerful at the start or interspersed throughout the book. I'd recommend starting with Disc 5, but this is still a memorable essay on aging. J.A.S (c) AudioFile 2003, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 17, 2002
      For the National Public Radio series One Hundred Years of Stories, broadcast two years ago, Ellis interviewed Americans at least 100 years old—some of them ailing or confused in their thinking, others completely coherent, lively and full of fascinating tales from the past and insightful wisdom gleaned from a century of living. The poignancy of a prolific writer and Hollywood veteran who can't remember enough to participate in the interview is offset by a woman who lives alone, still rows her own boat and occasionally skinny-dips, and by a man who marries for the third time at 103. Ellis reveals little of her own life here, and withholds any intimate introspection when, for example, a 101-year-old law professor describes his regret at spending so much time on his work rather than having a family and points out that Ellis's childless lifestyle is similar. On the other hand, she abandons straight journalism by indulging in a long tangent about "limbic resonance," or getting absorbed in someone's telling of a story. She concludes that "emotional connection with another person is all that will make you happy," but she tells readers this rather than letting her interviewees speak for themselves. If Ellis had stuck with the subjects' own voices and fleshed out their stories in more detail, this might have been a powerful oral history of America in the 20th century. Instead, it reads like a radio show—brief quotes with a few sound bites of editorialization. Agent, Jonathon Lazear. (Sept.)Forecast:National publicity, a radio campaign and NPR sponsorship and author interviews will put this book on older readers' radar. It should sell well as a gift book come the holidays.

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  • English

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