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This book starts with several chapters which are amongst the most sensible I have some across to do with depression. The chapters dealing with the use of the Psalms are very practical.
Psalm 13 was called by a friend of mine, 'The Depressives' Psalm.' Using this psalm in the book was of great comfort to me, for this friend misunderstands me and has turned away from me causing enormous grief.This grief has impacted on my depression greatly. Yet, as this book testifies, there is always hope in Christ, even in the deepest despair.I know there will be total reconciliation one day.
Thomas Lewis fully understands depression, first hand.
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Based on research questioning about 500 executives who took IPOs between 1986 and 1996. So, most IPOs came from companies who had been profitable for a few years. After the collapse of the Internet stocks, the context is similar, but I believe such profit records may not be as important as during 1986-96.
Published in 1999. So, it has comments to imply "being first makes the company valuable without profits".
About the authors and their style
Authors are experienced in their job of bringing IPOs.
This book is not at all in the class of books by Al Ries and Jack Trout, but more like a text book, covering every related point (from text book point of view). There is no prioritization or difference in emphasis of the importance of various issues involved.
Their diagram on cover of book is confusing because they have used 2-dimensions to show a linear 1-dimension process, which essentially are their recommended steps.
Book's Message
1. Define goal/success. IPO may not be the best way to achieve that.
2. Plan and start working on IPO at least one year ahead of the need.
3. Many specific to-do items: ·Revise salaries as variable salaries that include stocks rather than just cash. ·Plan personal estates. Give gifts before IPOs to family members to minimize future tax liability. Hire CPA for this planning. ·Hire Earnst & Young early. ·Clean books of accounts-use GAAP. ·Build strong executive team. ·Start working like a public company at least one year before-that is-create quarter-to-quarter profitability guidance and exceed them. Create reports such as needed by SEC. ·Build external Board. Create committees of Board members.
If you want to read just 7 pages, read these: 25, 37, 56, 65, 74, 108, 170
The lightly referenced, well structured chapters span: the CEO's journey; the journey's early vital steps; chart your transaction strategy; chart your personal strategy; create the winning team; complete your IPO platform; be the public company; the IPO event; and deliver the value. Useful appendices span: outline for a business plan; selecting the stock market; registration exemptions and resale restrictions; overview of the SEC and SEC rules and regulations; simplified registration under the small business disclosure system; and glossary.
Strengths include: the concise factual (dry) writing style; good use of exhibits and checklists; and useful easily-accessible content addressing legal, accounting, reporting, board issues (amongst others).
Weaknesses include: need for more sidebar success story anecdotes (which integrate the steps); mostly US focus; and relatively superficial analysis evidence supporting the success factors and 'journey' metaphor.
Overall, a very useful working book, to be read with something like 'Confessions of a Venture Capitalist' (ISBN 0446526800) or 'E-boys' (ISBN 0812930959), for a fuller life-cycle, energetic view of the IPO journey.
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This is one of those plays where you read because you're more interested about what happens to the bad guy (and the bad gal) than what happens to the good guys. (Alsemero who! ) I envy the performers who get to play DeFlores and Beatrice-Joanna.
A lot of scholarly treatises about the play criticized the humorous subplot, claiming that it had no relevance and no connection to the main plot. My response is, "Hell-o! Is anybody home?" OK, that wasn't a scholarly response, but any scholar who can't see the thematic connection (characters who mask their true natures versus characters in disguise) doesn't deserve a scholarly response.
Anne M. Marble All About Romance
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The experiment is a qualified success. Since there exists far more invention about Wainewright than fact, the format does allow Motion the opportunity both to imagine a life through the subject's own eyes and to present far more speculation than he could in a traditional biography. Still, this is the first time I've found a book's notes more captivating than the text. Furthermore, the patience of many a reader will be tried by the constant flipping back and forth between the fictional narrative and the supporting material, which is fairly necessary to understand what's going on.
The appeal of this volume, ultimately, will depend on the reader's interest in the character of Wainewright himself, and especially in the man's apparently infinite self-regard. In an 1867 biographical account, Walter Thornbury called Wainewright an "insufferable fop," and Oscar Wilde characterized Wainewright as "a young dandy [who] sought to be somebody rather than do something." Motion's account supports both of these assessments quite solidly.
Part of the allure of Wainewright's story has always been the prominence of the company he kept; he was friends or acquaintances with several of the Romantic poets (particular Blake), as well as artists Henry Fuseli and Theodore von Holst and "London Magazine" regulars Charles Lamb, Thomas de Quincey, and William Hazlitt. Although Motion offers a passable account of the history of the magazine and the writing that appeared in its pages, including Wainewright's own meager contributions, he provides only one or two fictional paragraphs--and a complementary note--portraying each of the major figures in this milieu. Since I was led to believe (or perhaps I presumed) that the book would offer a broader survey of the Romantic crowd, I found these cursory portraits rather disappointing.
Ultimately, though, Wainewright himself is a third-rate Romantic writer and a deservedly neglected painter. Motion's experiment attempts to raise questions about the nature of biography, and he examines in an afterword how the facts, suppositions, and grotesque inventions surrounding Wainewright's life and crimes captured the Victorian imagination. The fascination with his notoriety continues to this day: it's not for nothing that Motion calls his book "Wainewright the Poisoner" rather than "Wainewright the Romantic." Yet, if Bulwer Lytton, Dickens, Wilde, and other writers (including Motion) had not demonized Wainewright or embellished his misdeeds, then surely the man would have been little more than a footnote in surveys of the Romantic period--if that. Motion never seems to concede that Wainewright's ignominy has in fact given both his art and his writing a longevity it doesn't deserve, and this book adds to the legend as much as it clarifies it.
Unfortunately, this is not the case. The book is so much like a doctoral dissertation that the reader never gets close to the subject. The voice of Wainewright, done extremely well in the formal language of the period, nevertheless keeps him at an unbridgeable distance. Wainewright himself never admits his crimes--in fact, does not even recognize them as crimes--and seems to be solely concerned with his own ends, not characteristics allowing for reader identification. Most unfortunately, footnotes so heavily burden the narrative they constitute almost as many pages as the novel itself, and they bring any flow the author does create to a juddering stop. Appearing at the end of every chapter, rather than at the end of the book, they act as deadweights throughout.
Andrew Motion is a respected biographer who has chosen to write this "novel" because it's the only way he can fill in the gaps in the real Wainewright's shadowy history, but he is too much the conscientious scholar to be able to exploit the privileges which fiction allows him. We end up, ironically, with a slow, footnoted, scholarly account of Wainewright, a man who lived almost totally in the moment.
The life story, though, is Wainewright's, and with Motion's borrowed voice to animate his own hastily drawn self-portrait, Wainewright regains life long enough to become unforgettable. He was clearly a very talented painter, and enough positive testimonials of his later life in Australia survive to refute the cartoonish vilification under which his name shrank in his native land. Guilty of forgery, guilty perhaps of worse, he was also a glib and resourceful man, one who never lost interest in the art he chose as his calling and who kept drawing and painting nearly right up to his lonely death on faraway shores.
I personally felt the book gained speed and interest beginning in chapter 10, when Wainewright's own life became more difficult and he became, perhaps, more contemplative, just as Mr. Motion's writing did from that point on.
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The footnotes, which develop the historical basis for what is essential several hundred pages of whining, are actually more interesting than the novel itself, and show what Motion, a competent and conscientious historian, is capable of when he does not hamstring himself by setting up too restrictive a scenario. Motion is obviously not comfortable portraying the literary giants with whom Wainewright interacts, and so he shows them only through the jaundiced (and totally unsympathetic) eye of Wainewright himself. The footnotes are essential in figuring out where Wainewright is sowing truth into his lies, but frankly, I was not able to become interested in Wainewright enough to care about when he tells the truth, and when he lies.
Those interested in this genre of historical fiction are encouraged to check out Tim Powers, who manages to portray historical figures more realistically and sympathetically, even when he's throwing ghosts and vampires into the mix.
Unfortunately, this is not the case. The book is so erudite--so like a doctoral dissertation--that the reader never gets close to the subject. The voice of Wainewright, done extremely well in the formal language of the period, nevertheless keeps him at an unbridgeable distance. Wainewright himself never admits his crimes--in fact, does not even recognize them as crimes--and seems to be solely concerned with his own ends, not characteristics allowing for reader identification. Most unfortunately, footnotes so heavily burden the narrative they constitute almost as many pages as the novel itself, and they bring any flow the author does create to a juddering stop. Appearing at the end of every chapter, rather than at the end of the book, they act as deadweights throughout.
Andrew Motion is a respected biographer who appears to have chosen to write a novel because it's the only way he can fill in the gaps in Wainewright's shadowy history, but he is too much the conscientious scholar to be able to exploit the privileges which fiction allows him. We end up, ironically, with a footnoted, scholarly account of Wainewright, a man who lived almost totally in the moment.
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