Business

Reviewed by: 

"Historically women are taught that it is unladylike to call attention to themselves and one should always defer to men, and this book offers evidence-based rebuttals to th

Reviewed by: 

At the age of five, a lonely boy named Elon Musk (b. 1971) decided to walk on his own to his cousin’s birthday party.

Reviewed by: 

Brad Stone is a Bloomberg Journalist who has previously written The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon.

Reviewed by: 

“A revealing, highly readable account of megalomania run amok.”

Reviewed by: 

The “mystery” in the subtitle of this compelling biography of the media mogul, Robert Maxwell, is how and why his big body was found floating face up in the waters of the Atlantic Ocean, not far fr

Reviewed by: 

On May 10, 1869, as the last ceremonial rail was bolted down at Promontory, Utah, a San Francisco newspaper declared America’s first transcontinental railroad a “victory over space, the elements, a

Reviewed by: 

“The Hour of Fate is a tale of greed, power, and accountability, an epic story of a clash of titans, one a political dynamo, the other unparalleled in business sav

Reviewed by: 

"Jeff Guinn studies the very different Edison and Ford as much as the places they camped.

Author(s):
Genre(s):
Reviewed by: 

If that "Stay thirsty my friends" Dos Equis man hadn't been dubbed "The Most Interesting Man in the World," surely Geoffrey Kent could claim the sobriquet.

Author(s):
Reviewed by: 

The Everything Store provides extraordinary access to one of the great business stories of this or any other time.

Reviewed by: 

“Understanding the man behind Fox News, how his juggernaut was assembled, and how it is captained shines a new light on news reporting—whether one leans port or starboard.”

Reviewed by: 

“There’s a lesson in Ilana Edelstein’s priorities that goes beyond business.”

Reviewed by: 

“Schelling’s Game Theory gives readers an excellent Harvard game theory course by a renowned Nobel Prize winner through the eyes of his Boswell.

Reviewed by: 

“Daphne Guinness is a book for those who believe in free spirits and for those who can see past celebrity.

Reviewed by: 

Let’s for a moment get our bearings after the summer of 2011’s little economic unpleasantness.

Reviewed by: 

“This is an incredibly well written history of several contributors to economic theory and a perfect follow-up to A Beautiful Mind. . . .

Author(s):
Genre(s):
Reviewed by: 

In the Information Age, the sacred bonds of tech hookups trump the holy vows of matrimony.