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Exactly as You Are

The Life and Faith of Mister Rogers

ebook
1 of 2 copies available
1 of 2 copies available

Welcome to the spiritual neighborhood of Fred Rogers

“I like you as you are
Exactly and precisely
I think you turned out nicely
And I like you as you are.”

Fred Rogers fiercely believed that all people deserve love. This conviction wasn’t simply sentimental: it came directly from his Christian faith. God, he insisted, loves us just the way we are. 

In Exactly as You Are, Shea Tuttle looks at Fred Rogers’s life, the people and places that made him who he was, and his work through Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood. She pays particular attention to his faith—because Fred Rogers was a deeply spiritual person, ordained by his church with a one-of-a-kind charge: to minister to children and families through television. 

Tuttle explores this kind, influential, sometimes surprising man: the neighborhood he came from, the neighborhood he built, and the kind of neighbor he, by his example, calls all of us to be. Throughout, Tuttle shows how he was guided by his core belief: that God loves children, and everyone else, exactly as they are.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 5, 2019
      Theologian Tuttle (Can I Get a Witness?) mixes anecdotes, analysis, and theological exploration in this delightful biography of Fred Rogers. In the first third, she follows Rogers’s life from awkward, sickly child growing up in Latrobe, Penn.; through college at Rollins Collins; and the beginnings of his career in television. While Tuttle’s beginning grafts many religious overtones onto Rogers’s run-of-the-mill Christian upbringing, the remaining two-thirds build a striking and coherent image of Rogers’s faith with impressive close readings of episodes of Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood, interviews, and writings plucked from Rogers’s career. The comparison of Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood to parables and the connection between Rogers’s focus on emotion and the Incarnation in his personal beliefs are especially poignant. Tuttle provides a clear sense of the religious origins of Rogers’s progressivism and its limits by showing how he gently pushed against gender norms and urged racial integration, but also insisted the gay actor playing Officer Clemmons remain closeted. There is a reverence in how Tuttle describes Rogers’s actions and beliefs, but she avoids hagiography by showing some of her subject’s shortcomings, such as his perfectionism and persistent avoidance of conflict. Tuttle’s satisfying biography provides a keen sense of the deeply religious forces behind a classic TV show and its widely lauded creator.

    • Library Journal

      August 9, 2019

      Tuttle (coeditor, Can I Get a Witness) sets out to discover the person behind Mr. Rogers's television personality. To accomplish this task, the author consulted primary source materials at the Fred Rogers Archive, interviewed people who knew him, and considered secondary sources. Tuttle explores Mr. Rogers's early years, educational background, personal life, and development of his successful children's show in Pittsburgh. Readers will discover the real Mr. Rodgers was not much different from his television persona. Along with his many accomplishments, Mr. Rogers was also an ordained Presbyterian minister and his deeply held religious views helped shape the direction of his neighborhood. Through skits, puppets, songs, and visits with other characters, Mr. Rogers used his television ministry to teach children, and many adults, the timeless message that God loves us exactly as we are. VERDICT An enjoyable biography of a man many people believed they knew from his daily show. This warmly written volume will surely delight his many fans. Best for public, seminary and, church libraries.--Jacqueline Parascandola, Univ. of Pennsylvania

      Copyright 2019 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      September 1, 2019
      Fred Rogers was everybody's favorite neighbor, but he was also, as he once said of himself, a composer, piano player, writer, television producer, performer, husband, and father. He was an ordained Presbyterian minister, too, and, Tuttle adds in this affectionate biography, a man of complexity. Both whimsical and controlling, inarguably strange but clearly beloved, he was a deeply religious person. It is in the context of his religion that Tuttle limns what almost seems to be a charmed life. His neighborhood as a boy was Latrobe, Pennsylvania, where his parents were the richest people in town, but also, seemingly, the most generous, always helping those in need and selflessly serving the community. This service ethos helped define their son's life and the neighborhood he would create. Though Rogers was never overtly religious on the air, his beliefs were nevertheless fundamental to him as person and performer, and that sensibility informed his adored program. To his often-asked question, Won't you be my neighbor? readers will doubtless offer a resounding yes to both the question and this charming biography.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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