Readers' Comments

Monica
McWilliams
Human Rights Commissioner, Northern Ireland
September, 2008:
Swanee, I meant to write earlier but I have been on the move around the
country since I last saw you, still working hard to finish the work on
the Bill of Rights for Northern Ireland. Your book is truly one of the
best accounts that I have read of what it is like to be a woman in a
leadership position with all the trials and joys of domestic life....
The humour, the warmth and the love are all there in abundance. I found
I was reading about a companion of mine as your story proceeded. I only
hope one day that I can write my own story as beautifully as you have
written yours. I don’t much care now if I don’t write it because I think
you have summed up the lives of many of us women – the never ending struggles
we face to make the world a better place, to make our homes full of love,
to challenge the animosity towards us and to leave a better future behind
for our kids....When I first saw you in Belfast all those
years ago, when we had the first women’s conference after the ceasefire,
I was so intimidated because I had heard so much about you and you seemed
to have such a large following of women in that great hall....It just
shows you that you don’t know a person until you get to see their real
humanity and I have been so privileged to get to know yours.
S.
Farrell:
Fabulous book!
I thoroughly enjoyed this book and can't rave enough about it! Swanee,
through her life's work, is an incredible inspiration.
Doug
Drenkow:
One of the Most Revealing Autobiographies
You Will Ever Read!
" Swanee Hunt has taken a phenomenal journey through life and written
all about it in her new book and autobiography called 'Half-Life of a Zealot.'
I found this book one of the most revealing autobiographies I have ever read.
It takes an incredible amount of courage to strip herself bare the way she did
so much of the time in this book, and I value that because I really felt I had
an opportunity to get to know her. It was not just some kind of political exercise
and that's rare -- particularly in politics." -- Barry Gordon on the progressive talk radio show "Barry Gordon From Left Field" (for which I am the producer)
Loung
Ung:
Half-Life of a Zealot is a remarkable book, and Swanee Hunt is a remarkable
person. In her introduction, the author quotes Jill Ker Conway who wrote: "The
woman autobiographer...cannot depart too dramatically from popularly
accepted stereotypes, which affirm the man of action and the suffering
or redemptive female. To do so is to risk losing persuasive power." A statement Ms. Hunt agrees with, but; she writes, "rather than feel reluctant about showing my vulnerability, I've wondered if it's
safe to show strength." In those two sentences, Ms. Hunt beautifully sets the book's tone of the dualities
of her life, one that was lived in isolation, and the other in public;
one where love was given freely by her gentle mother, the other often
held at bay by her powerful, famous father. With razor sharp intellect,
openness, and candor, Ms. Hunt weaves her many lives as politician, daughter,
sister, wife, mother, and peace maker into a wonderfully complex tapestry
that pulls readers in deeper with each flip of the page. For even with
her family's enormous wealth, Half-Life is a universal tale of a child's
longings for family, love, and acceptance; and a triumphant story of
a woman who grew into her own power and self-worth. Written in a casual
and easy to read narrative, Half-Life is filled with unforgettable characters,
fascinating events, and enough twists and turns that both mend and break
the hearts to make it an engaging read.
J.
Laurie:
The Remarkable Life of an Extraordinary
Woman
Every person has multiple life themes, but few have so many, in such
extreme form, so publicly exposed, and over time so effectively integrated
into a life of service and beauty; fewer still are able to tell their
story with such candor, vulnerability, generosity and hope.
The externals of Swanee Hunt's life are worthy topics for a library of works: growing up in a family which merged great wealth, religious conservatism, and anti-communist fervor; finding her own gifts as a theologian, composer, philanthropist, civic leader, author and diplomat; learning to trust her instincts and voice to shape a life of radical compassion; engaging the full range of her gifts and resources to lift up the needs and tremendous capabilities of women throughout the world. These stories are well-told and compelling and would be an exceptional work if they were told in the third person.
But this book is at its core the story of one woman's life journey as she has come to terms with those externals and with the joys and challenges of her own complex inner life, with family relations and responsibilities, with her loneliness and love, and with a deep awareness of her own strengths and searching. By revealing the inner and outer complexities of her life so boldly and honestly, Ambassador Hunt has created a work which will resonate deeply in the lives of many others.
I believe this work will have a lasting value, as the expression of a remarkable life, and as a witness and invitation to all who read it to live with similar passion and intentionality for a better world. By sharing her life, Swanee Hunt has helped blaze a pathway for countless other women and men. We can be very grateful for her wisdom and courage.
Mary
R. Sissel:
Speaking the Truth
We heard Swanee talk about and read from her book "Half
Life of a Zealot", in November in Denver. We recommend it to every American, male or female! Swanee
speaks from the heart in telling her story. She's experienced success
and failure, and she tells it exactly the way she felt about both her
successes and her failures - and what she did to make the most of both.
Her zeal for life and for helping others is a true inspiration. She lives
that inspiration, and as my husband and I have said to each other, "reading her book is motivation to re-invent ourselves yet again." Her passion for life and her dedication to helping others, while staying the
course of being all that she can be, makes it a "must read" for you and those you care about. We challenge you to pick up the book, begin
reading anywhere in the beautiful pages, and then try to put it down.
Thank you, Swanee, for being who you are and for sharing that incredible
you. Mary and George Sissel, Denver, Colorado
Charles
Decker:
Very candid - and what a life!
I picked this book up and started reading in the middle. I literally
couldn't put it down and realized immediately I would have to start from
the beginning. Though some may say 'Well, give me all that money and
see what I could do with it,' but that would demean the passion and commitment
behind Swanee Hunt's dedicated public service and focused philanthropy.
I am from Texas myself, and I saw first-hand how the archconservatives
down there try to denigrate anyone who doesn't agree with their agenda.
Thank goodness there are people like this firebrand who are determined
to make the world a better place. I found myself very moved reading this
woman's story. Why do more people not know of her work? If ever the producers
of '60 Minutes' are looking for a great candidate for a full profile,
have I got a girl for you! Oops -- a person for you!
Pam
Plate:
A story of a woman helping women, among
many other adventures
Swanee Hunt's book, Half-Life of a Zealot, is wonderful!! Very empowering
and a fun read. She has a gift for expressing complicated matters - personal,
professional and political - in simple terms, and she manages to do it
without losing the complexities and nuance that make this such a full-bodied
story.
Roberta
Baskin:
Zeal for "Half-Life
of a Zealot"
Swanee Hunt's story is deeply moving. Her father, H.L. Hunt, has been
called the richest man in America. But much of Hunt's early years is
spent in an emotionally impoverished family. Her spirited memoir is a
story of transformation. Brought up as a conservative Southern Baptist
fighting communism alongside her eccentric father, Hunt evolves into
a dynamic advocate for women in conflict areas, women waging peace, and
women on the campaign trail. As a citizen of the world, Hunt is appointed
Ambassador to Austria and becomes a passionate philanthropist. She is
astonishingly candid, vulnerable, and endearing. Hunt bares her soul
and shows how Southern grit, hard work, and zeal (along with wealth)
can help change the world. The journey of how she becomes who she is
today is a spellbinding tale.