Rating: Summary: the underbelly of a weird subculture Review: The reviews here of this book amused me as much as the book itself distressed me. Like Po, I'm a Stanford grad. Unlike Po, I'm about 5 years too old to have gotten in on the dot-com bubble. I graduated into a recession! The mindset of most of these disappointed dot-commers is quite familiar to me. It's a subcultural attitude that led me and many of my set of Stanford "misfit" friends in droves to the campus counseling center to examine our "lack of ambition."If you spend your late teens and early twenties "searching for meaning," you can move on and pursue or attempt to pursue a suitable career path with an adequate balance of financial and psychological rewards. If you spend your late teens and early twenties indulging fantasies of unlimited riches and "taking over the world" with sandcastle businesses you end up having to do your young, strident phase in middle age!
Rating: Summary: A good title can sell an awful book Review: I browsed this one in the library - and then berated the acquisitions person for wasting funds on it. Despite what the title implies, this effort is not the least bit insightful. The repetitive career-switch tales are more monotonous than interesting. Do not confuse this author with a "writer" - that term implies, at the very least, the ability to competently use the language and sensibly organize information. The only thing an intelligent person can take away from this book is that a catchy title and cover copy can sell any book - even if the text is garbage. Those 4 and 5 star reviews have to be bogus.
Rating: Summary: Inconclusive Review: The book presents a large number of cases that are neither well-categorised nor described.
Rating: Summary: The most arrogant writer? Review: The book could have been great--the topic has such potential to be entertaining and inspiring. I don't mind the armchair psychology and I like reading about life decisions of real people. The problem is that the author is so arrogant that the book quickly becomes annoying. By the fifth chapter, it was almost ridiculous how he would compliment himself. I was calling my friends and reading aloud the text, just to laugh at it. By the 10th chapter I had to put the book down.
Rating: Summary: Dissapointing Review: I can't understand those that think this is an important book. I thought it would be an interesting study, so I kept reading, hoping that the next chapter would show people that knew what they wanted to do with their lives and how they got there. Instead, more of people with no idea. Directly after reading this, I read Michael Lewis' Moneyball. He presents person after person who knows exactly what they want to do with their lives. Great book, read this instead.
Rating: Summary: trite and incomplete Review: I read the first 50 pages before I decided to stop reading this book. Bronson slaps together trite, incomplete and uninsightful interviews with a lofty title. Instead of developing the stories of a few individuals, Bronson gives the reader many 4 page interviews that are full of irrelevant discussion and Bronson's own trite analysis. Perhaps only a page or two are devoted to describing the struggles the person went through to arrive at his/her decision. This book has no answer's and also fails to ask the right questions. It also does a poor job of describing the stories' of the interviewees.
Rating: Summary: What would Po Bronson do? Review: After reading numerous reviews and after the NPR interview, I was really excited to read this book. In the end, it was nothing like I expected it to be. Instead of reading essays about career changes and interesting occupations, I felt like I was reading essays about what the author would do in each of the given situations. I find this to be rather arrogant given most of the circumstances. The book has much thought-provoking potential, but it falls way short. I found Bronson's observations to be a bit short sighted and not always on target. In the end, I was just annoyed. This definitely would have benefitted from a more "hands-off" approach on the author's part. What a disappointment.
Rating: Summary: It didn't work for me Review: If you have an amiable or expressive social learning style this book would interest you. I have an analytical driver style so after the first chapter I was bored. I thought the book would be more like 'What Color is Your Parachute' or 'Whistle While You Work'. I expected some interesting means/methods to discover what I want to be when I grow up. If you find yourself lacking self-esteem or seek the comfort how others finds themselves, try this book. There was too much emphasis on the Generation 'Why' crowd in the interviews. Maybe the author feels more comfortable interviewing his generation.
Rating: Summary: title should be: "Redefining the Yuppie" Review: This book was an easy read and it was fun to learn what people do with their lives. However, halfway through the book, you realize the "real people" in this book are all white (or asian) whining yuppies in the 25-35 age range and it gets annoying. Oh gee, next time I go through life going to ivy league schools, and I'm torn between my job as a professional dancer and a stock broker with a zillion dollar salary and I want to quit it all to become a school teacher, but I have to sell my BMW, I'll know i'm not alone.
Rating: Summary: Your life BEGINS each day. Review: If you are one of the few people in this world who LOVES her/his job each and every day, consider yourself extraordinarily LUCKY! (You many think of this book as wasteful of your time.) As for the rest of us, we could use a little deep thinking on the subject of what it is that we DO for a paycheck. Do we need to keep doing what we are doing - or should we change it? This handy little book explores the things some people did that were GOOD, and what other people did that were NOT so good at all. The reader is encouraged to apply what she has read, and hopefully - it will transform the trajectory of her life....The aim is to redirect oneself into a life more worthy. After all - professional work requires tons of personal effort..shouldn't it be fun at least SOME OF THE TIME??? If this book helps someone to spend some valuable time examining thier professional life; it is well worth it. No, this handy little book will NOT TELL YOU WHAT TO DO with your life -- it only begs the questions -- is what you're doing worth one's effort, and do you really wish to waste much more time spinning your wheels at something you HATE and DETEST doing? One can appreciate the interviews Mr. Bronson conducted, and the time he spent traveling alone in order for himself to reflect on his career as well. I'd say Bronson is in the right business. I found the book to be most inspiring. One additional unexpected bonus (that means nothing at all)...Mr. Bronson is surprisingly handsome. Not to insinuate that authors are bad looking, but I was pleasantly surprized to see his lovely face at the end of the book. If he gets tired of writing, I suppose he could choose modeling as a career alternative! HA!
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