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Accountability
and Ethics -> General Resources
Character Counts: Leadership Qualities in Washington
Wilberforce, Lincoln, Solzhenitsyn
Os Guinness, ed. (Baker Book House, 1999)
At the end of the twentieth century, as moral standards decline
(especially among public figures), our nation is in need of
men and women of character. In Character Counts, renowned
thinker and cultural critic Os Guinness has gathered together
short biographical and reflective chapters about four remarkable
world figures who not only withstood the extreme adversities
of their offices and situations but flourished and grew under
pressure. How did they do it? When did George Washington acquire
the courage and tolerance to become the president of a fledgling
new democracy? What enabled William Wilberforce to forge the
way for the abolition of slavery and reformation of morals
in England? How did Abraham Lincoln change from an awkward,
undereducated country boy into the eloquent and determined
leader of a war-torn America? What inner strength sustained
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn during long years of imprisonment and
exile in the Gulag Archipelago? Concerned citizens and all
who are eager to raise the level of character in this generation
and the next will draw inspiration from these brief, readable
biographies. The four insightful chapters reveal that adversity,
apart from its power to overwhelm, has the potential to spotlight
true moral character and produce life-changing leaders. Softcover,
160 pages, $8.99
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