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Publishers Weekly08/26/2013 Shaw's meandering book simply retells the well-known story that Woody Guthrie wrote his epic "This Land Is Your Land" as a rejoinder to Irving Berlin's "God Bless America." Side by side, he traces the similarities between Berlin's and Guthrie's upbringings, comparing some of the forces that may have led each writer to what would eventually become his most recognizable song. Berlin was a Russian migr who rose from homelessness to wealth, and Guthrie fled the Oklahoma Dust Bowl and a broken family to fame and something like fortune in New York City. When they were young, both men "busked for money, making up parodies of popular songs, and were known for their quick wit and eagerness to entertain." Berlin wrote "God Bless America" for Kate Smith so that she could have a "special song for her annual Armistice Day broadcast.



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