Next book

CHAIRMAN MAO'S BUSINESS SCHOOL

Instructive, but limited by its central gimmick.

A business book that uses the words of Mao Zedong to illustrate key strategies.

Taking voluminous writings–from books, speeches and articles–that laid out the chairman’s instructions for running China, Kleivan adapts Mao’s philosophy to modern business management. Describing Chairman Mao’s Business School as a “cookbook,” the author endeavors to “give ideas and inspiration to build corporations that will succeed in the competitive world.” Each of his chapters and subchapters–ranging in subject matter from “How to be an Efficient Business Executive” to “The Three Stages of Your Company’s Route to Success”–begin with lengthy quotations from the chairman. To apply these dictates to Western business practices, Kleivan provides a glossary of substitutions (for example, read “cadres” as “first line managers” and “peasants” as employees or workers). Then, using personal experience–the Norwegian author has worked for international companies like Dupont, IBM, Scandinavian Airlines, Diners Club and Citibank–and case studies from successful companies, he lays out his recommendations for success in business. From the outset, he stresses that his book should not be construed as “an endorsement of the politics that Chairman Mao carried out during his years in power” and he succeeds in drawing convincing parallels between Mao’s writing and modern management goals. But despite his enduring influence, Mao remains a controversial figure. By choosing as his centerpiece a divisive communist leader, Kleivan risks alienating potential readers before they even open his book. Furthermore, communism as an ideology and political system is very much at odds with the capitalist economy to which the author’s business advice is geared. Ultimately, the book is a bit of misnomer, since the vast majority of the book is rooted in the author’s experience in the business world, not Mao’s experience in the Cultural Revolution. Perhaps Kleivan should take more credit–his book is comprehensive, impassioned and clearly informed by a deep understanding of modern management.

Instructive, but limited by its central gimmick.

Pub Date: Dec. 1, 2008

ISBN: 978-1-4257-9813-0

Page Count: -

Publisher: N/A

Review Posted Online: May 23, 2010

Next book

CODERS

THE MAKING OF A NEW ART AND THE REMAKING OF THE WORLD

Fans of Markoff, Levy, Lanier et al. will want to have a look at this intriguing portrait of coding and coders.

Of computer technology and its discontents.

Computers can do all kinds of cool things. The reason they can, writes tech journalist Thompson (Smarter than You Think: How Technology is Changing Our Minds for the Better, 2013), is that a coder has gotten to the problem. “Programmers spend their days trying to get computers to do new things,” he writes, “so they’re often very good at understanding the crazy what-ifs that computers make possible.” Some of those things, of course, have proven noxious: Facebook allows you to keep in touch with high school friends but at the expense of spying on your every online movement. Yet they’re kind of comprehensible, since they’re based on language: Coding problems are problems of words and thoughts and not numbers alone. Thompson looks at some of the stalwarts and heroes of the coding world, many of them not well-known—Ruchi Sanghvi, for example, who worked at Facebook and Dropbox before starting a sort of think tank “aimed at convincing members to pick a truly new, weird area to examine.” If you want weird these days, you get into artificial intelligence, of which the author has a qualified view. Humans may be displaced by machines, but the vaunted singularity probably won’t happen anytime soon. Probably. Thompson is an enthusiast and a learned scholar alike: He reckons that BASIC is one of the great inventions of history, being one of the ways “for teenagers to grasp, in such visceral and palpable ways, the fabric of infinity.” Though big tech is in the ascendant, he writes, there’s a growing number of young programmers who are attuned to the ethical issues surrounding what they do, demanding, for instance, that Microsoft not provide software to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency. Those coders, writes Thompson, are “the one group of people VCs and CEOs cannot afford to entirely ignore,” making them the heroes of the piece in more ways than one.

Fans of Markoff, Levy, Lanier et al. will want to have a look at this intriguing portrait of coding and coders.

Pub Date: March 26, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-7352-2056-0

Page Count: 448

Publisher: Penguin Press

Review Posted Online: Dec. 8, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2019

Next book

FAIR PLAY

WHAT YOUR CHILD CAN TEACH YOU ABOUT ECONOMICS, VALUES, AND THE MEANING OF LIFE

Another collection of brash, intelligent essays on economics by the author of The Armchair Economist (1993). Landsburg, a columnist for the online magazine Slate, turns his hand to demystifying everyday economics, using his nine-year- old daughter as a sounding board. While his exchanges with Cayley can turn overly sentimental, Landsburg's sharp wit and sharper insight make this a fun read for anyone with a taste for logic and unbiased opinions. Landsburg begins a discussion on NAFTA by debunking the notion that the number of workers who quit their jobs because of pay cuts represents the true cost of foreign competition. It's the workers who stay and take a pay cut, he argues, who are the real losers, because they bear the full brunt of the loss in wages. He later points out that while some would argue that it's unfair to the $16-an-hour worker to lose a job to a $3-an-hour worker, it's actually the public who, from the point of view of pure economics, has been cheated: They've been overpaying for products made by overpriced workers. At times, Landsburg risks sounding like a curmudgeon: He's irritated that Cayley's teachers dictate on the environment, sex, and drugs. But he rightly points out that even the best-intentioned environmental lesson often consists simply of memorizing the number of acres of rainforest lost, rather than a more complex analysis of land use. His best response is saved for Cayley's Hebrew school class: When asked to write an essay that begins ``To be more like God, I will . . .'' students penned treacly lines such as ``I will be kind to animals.'' Landsburg's stinging response: ``I will slay the first born of my enemies.'' Often funny and at times poetic, these essays are eminently readable and always smart. (Radio satellite tour)

Pub Date: Nov. 8, 1997

ISBN: 0-684-82755-7

Page Count: 224

Publisher: Free Press

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 1997

Close Quickview