Daniel Bergner is a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine and the author of a novel, Moments of Favor, and four books of nonfiction: What Do Women Want?, The Other Side of Desire, In the Land of the Magic Soldiers, and God of the Rodeo. In the Land of Magic Soldiers received an Overseas Press Club Award for international reporting and a Lettre-Ulysses Award for the Art of Reportage and was named a Los Angeles Times Best Book of the Year. God of the Rodeo was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year. In addition to the New York Times Magazine, Daniel's writing has appeared in the Atlantic, Granta, Harper's, Mother Jones, Talk, and the New York Times Book Review, and on the op-ed page of the New York Times. His writing is included in The Norton Reader: An Anthology of Nonfiction.
"Deeply moving.... A testament to the limitlessness of the human
spirit, even in the most forlorn and unexpected places.... This is
a book of great compassion that traces the contours of a single
remarkable life. But Bergner is also doing something more
expansive, examining the long and tormented history of black
involvement in an elite artistic tradition and in society at large.
Ultimately, this is the story that captures the most inexplicable
thing--the human will itself."--New York Times Book Review "Written
with filmlike immediacy.... This book is so good.... And the key
element--highlighted by the book's subtitle 'A Story of Race,
Music, and Family'--is Bergner's tackling of issues of race. With
sensitivity and candor, he shows the subtle and not-so-subtle
challenges the opera world poses to singers of color.... [A] vital,
compelling and highly recommended book."--Washington Post "An
amazing, inspiring story, a beautiful story."--Trevor Noah, The
Daily Show
"SING FOR YOUR LIFE is about the hard legacy of history and family,
and its transcendence through art. This book is Daniel Bergner's
masterpiece and puts him at the top of American literary
journalism."--George Packer, National Book Award-winning author of
The Assassins' Gate and The Unwinding
"Sing for Your Life is a generous book, filled with complicated,
compassionate characters, written with great journalistic skill but
also empathy. The passages on opera read like superb sports
writing. The passages on family illuminate the deeper reaches of
identity, race, judgment -- and love. To read the story of Ryan
Speedo Green is to be troubled, confused, heartbroken, thrilled,
hopeful, proud, and ultimately, perhaps, changed."--Jeff Hobbs,
author of New York Times bestseller The Short and Tragic Life of
Robert Peace
"Sing For Your Life is certain to be billed as a book about race.
And it is that, and also a book about art and hope and resilience.
But this is not a book about abstractions. It's a story that is
suspenseful in the deepest sense, and very moving - a story about a
fascinating human being. I am grateful to Mr. Bergner for having
introduced me to him."---Tracy Kidder, Pulitzer Prize-winning
author of The Soul of a New Machine and Mountains Beyond
Mountains
"Sing for Your Life is a study in voice: part technical account of
the vocal instrument, part celebration of its mysterious capacity
to move us through song.... [The book] deserves praise, maybe even
a year-end reward. It has so many of the qualities that critics and
readers admire: a sympathetic hero whose life sketches an arc from
tragedy to triumph; a treasured glimpse behind the high-culture
curtain."
--Washington Post opinion section
"Sing for Your Life is absolutely riveting. Any rise to stardom in
the daunting world of opera is bound to be dramatic, but Ryan
Speedo Green's story is harrowing and rewarding in unexpected ways.
From the first line, Daniel Bergner sets preconceptions about race,
class, and "high" culture against a breathtakingly candid narrative
of a young man's struggle, not just to conquer the Olympic
challenges of singing opera, but also to see beyond violence and
adversity to a life in music."
--Renée Fleming
"A first-rate psychological thriller.... Bergner cross-cuts between
Green's violent, impoverished childhood and his ascendance onto the
global opera stage. The result is a stirring prelude to a career
dangling on the edge of greatness, as well as a courageous
exploration of nature and nurture rarely addressed in cautious
industry discussions on diversity."
--Opera News
"A masterly crafted and unique portrait...While fans of opera will
find this to be a captivating biography of one of the most
decorated bass baritones, this highly recommended narrative is also
about a man who conquers his personal demons and limitations to
break racial barriers in one of the oldest cultural institutions in
the world."--Library Journal (starred review)
"A thrilling and authentic work of art, this is the unlikeliest of
portraits of an artist who against-all-odds rises from the ashes of
rural black poverty, a broken home, child abuse and the edges of
madness to vault to the threshold of opera stardom."
--Peter Gelb, General Manager, Metropolitan Opera
"A true-life rags-to-Wagner story."
--O, The Oprah Magazine
"Bergner brings Green and [his] mentors to vivid, heroic life....
Bergner's inspirational biography has instant appeal, and, with the
added attention to vocal techniques and rehearsals, readers with an
interest in music will be especially rewarded."
--Booklist
"Bergner pieces together this remarkable life with an impeccable
knack for storytelling.... Sing For Your Life is a first-rate
biography of a beaten-down young man who rode the opera train all
the way to Lincoln Center."
--Shelf Awareness
"Bergner richly weaves Green's rising stardom with scenes from a
daunting childhood.... In less skilled hands, Sing For Your Life
might mimic a cliched rag-to-riches fable.... Instead, Bergner
presents a far more nuanced and rigorous examination of the
institutional forces that shape Green's life.... It's Green's sense
of pride, of his connection to his history, to his heritage, that
Bergner so delicately captures in this melodious narrative for
which we, the readers, hang on every word."
--Atlanta Journal-Constitution
"Daniel Bergner writes from the heart. Night after night, I stayed
up late reading, entranced by this tender, unflinchingly honest,
beautifully told story. Ryan Speedo Green. His voice, his journey,
his exuberance will stay with me."--Alex Kotlowitz, author of
National Bestseller There Are No Children Here
"Gripping and inspiring...Bergner chronicles the auditions and
vocal contests as the struggles Green faces as a black man entering
a musical world that is mostly white, delivering a moving portrait
of a young man who succeeds, along with the help of encouraging
teachers."
--Publishers Weekly, starred review
"In Ryan Speedo Green we see a microcosm of American's own struggle
to throw off the shackles of our troubled racial legacy... His
story, expertly told by Daniel Bergner, is proof of the possibility
of all of our redemption."
--Joy-Ann Reid, National Correspondent for MSNBC and author of
Fracture
"In Sing For Your Life, Daniel Bergner beautifully tells the story
of what it means for a young man to, quite literally, find his
voice. In this chronicle of the life of Ryan Speedo Green, we see
how a young black man can rise, and hold onto hope, despite all the
forces working against him. We see how a young black man can sing
for his life and find triumph in the most unexpected of
places."
--Roxane Gay, author of the New York Times bestselling Bad Feminist
and An Untamed State
"Prepare for a feast.... A study in discipline and artistry,
musical agility, opera itself and the role that race has played in
all of it, this would be an enlightening read even without Green.
His story makes it unforgettable."
--Bookpage
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