Too Good to Be Forgotten

Too Good To Be Forgotten: Changing America in the '60s and '70s is a 1998 memoir by David Obst, published by John Wiley & Sons.

Book segments include Obst's childhood, his studies and travels, and his interactions with historically significant political figures during the subject decades.

[1] The start of each chapter includes the list of the subject year's popular films, television, and record albums.

[2] Jamie Stiehm of The Baltimore Sun wrote that the book "succeeds in his mission of breathing life into a series of snapshots of his youth and capturing the tempo of the times".

[1] Kyczynski wrote that the book had "painfully didactic prose" and that it was "a pretty lackluster tribute to the baby boomer generation.