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LIFE SWITCH

HOW TO EXPERIENCE THE POWER OF LIVING ON BY DISCOVERING YOUR POTENTIAL, PASSION, AND PURPOSE

A bracing and companionable personal consideration of the attitudes needed for success.

Steele sounds a call for businesspeople (and everybody else) to turn up the power levels on their lives in this motivational guide.

In his nonfiction debut, the author, a financial expert, entrepreneur, and motivational speaker, encourages readers to find purpose and passion by flipping the “on” switches in their lives. “I’m not talking about going from good to great,” Steele writes, referring to the 2001 bestselling book by Jim Collins. “I’m talking about going from lost to found. From wandering to wonderful.” As he discusses various aspects of conceiving, starting, and running a business, the author touches on everything from motivation to strategies for long-term sustainability. Steele fills out his practical observations with plenty of mini-motivational passages designed to fill his readers with the kind of enthusiasm he himself obviously feels—though, at times, these cheerleading sessions stumble a bit. “Even if you only feel like you’re at 70 percent of your best, you can still be worth 100 percent at some point,” he writes. “A one-hundred-dollar bill is still worth a hundred dollars regardless of its state” (damaged or even overly soiled U.S. currency can be refused as legal tender, but presumably readers will get the point). Nevertheless, Steele’s sheer energy as a storyteller as he relates his own experiences is both consistent and invigorating throughout, though some of those stories call the author’s judgment into question (at one point, he hired a man he met at the gym as a manager for his restaurant because he seemed cool…and fired him almost immediately for dating an underage employee). Quibbles aside, Steele, on the page, comes across as the ultimate upbeat manager, even when he’s addressing more quotidian matters, reminding his readers of the workaday aspects of keeping a business going.

A bracing and companionable personal consideration of the attitudes needed for success.

Pub Date: Oct. 21, 2025

ISBN: 9798891384255

Page Count: 288

Publisher: Amplify Publishing

Review Posted Online: Oct. 1, 2025

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WHO KNEW

MY STORY

Highly instructive for would-be tycoons, with plenty of entertaining interludes.

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Well-crafted memoir by the noted media mogul.

Diller’s home life as a youngster was anything but happy; as he writes early on, “The household I grew up in was perfectly dysfunctional.” His mother lived in her own world, his father was knee-deep in business deals, his brother was a heroin addict, and he tried to play by all the rules in order to allay “my fear of the consequences from my incipient homosexuality.” Somehow he fell into the orbit of show business figures like Lew Wasserman (“I was once arrested for joy-riding in Mrs. Wasserman’s Bentley”) and decided that Hollywood offered the right kind of escape. Starting in the proverbial mailroom, he worked his way up to be a junior talent agent, then scrambled up the ladder to become a high-up executive at ABC, head of Paramount and Fox, and an internet pioneer who invested in Match.com and took over a revitalized Ticketmaster. None of that ascent was easy, and Diller documents several key failures along the way, including boardroom betrayals (“What a monumental dope I’d been. They’d taken over the company—in a merger I’d created—with venality and duplicity”) and strategic missteps. It’s no news that the corporate world is rife with misbehavior, but the better part of Diller’s book is his dish on the players: He meets Jack Nicholson at the William Morris Agency, “wandering through the halls, looking for anyone who’d pay attention to him”; hangs out with Warren Beatty, ever on the make; mispronounces Barbra Streisand’s name (“her glare at me as she walked out would have fried a fish”); learns a remedy for prostatitis from Katharine Hepburn (“My father was an expert urological surgeon, and I know what I’m doing”); and much more in one of the better show-biz memoirs to appear in recent years.

Highly instructive for would-be tycoons, with plenty of entertaining interludes.

Pub Date: May 20, 2025

ISBN: 9780593317877

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: May 12, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2025

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GOOD ECONOMICS FOR HARD TIMES

Occasionally wonky but overall a good case for how the dismal science can make the world less—well, dismal.

“Quality of life means more than just consumption”: Two MIT economists urge that a smarter, more politically aware economics be brought to bear on social issues.

It’s no secret, write Banerjee and Duflo (co-authors: Poor Economics: A Radical Rethinking of the Way To Fight Global Poverty, 2011), that “we seem to have fallen on hard times.” Immigration, trade, inequality, and taxation problems present themselves daily, and they seem to be intractable. Economics can be put to use in figuring out these big-issue questions. Data can be adduced, for example, to answer the question of whether immigration tends to suppress wages. The answer: “There is no evidence low-skilled migration to rich countries drives wage and employment down for the natives.” In fact, it opens up opportunities for those natives by freeing them to look for better work. The problem becomes thornier when it comes to the matter of free trade; as the authors observe, “left-behind people live in left-behind places,” which explains why regional poverty descended on Appalachia when so many manufacturing jobs left for China in the age of globalism, leaving behind not just left-behind people but also people ripe for exploitation by nationalist politicians. The authors add, interestingly, that the same thing occurred in parts of Germany, Spain, and Norway that fell victim to the “China shock.” In what they call a “slightly technical aside,” they build a case for addressing trade issues not with trade wars but with consumption taxes: “It makes no sense to ask agricultural workers to lose their jobs just so steelworkers can keep theirs, which is what tariffs accomplish.” Policymakers might want to consider such counsel, especially when it is coupled with the observation that free trade benefits workers in poor countries but punishes workers in rich ones.

Occasionally wonky but overall a good case for how the dismal science can make the world less—well, dismal.

Pub Date: Nov. 12, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-61039-950-0

Page Count: 432

Publisher: PublicAffairs

Review Posted Online: Aug. 28, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2019

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