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Martha Inc. by Christopher Byron
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Martha Inc.

by Christopher Byron

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I would not have read this except for the fact that we read it in book club. That said, I found it absorbing. It is so hard to tell how much of this information is filtered by the author's perspective, which is not particularly flattering, but it is an interesting story nonetheless. It is most helpful when describing how Stewart built up her business and how she went about it. ( )
  peggybr | Mar 19, 2007 |
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0471123005, Hardcover)

There's probably no woman in America who is as famous--or controversial--as Martha Stewart. In Martha Inc. Christopher Byron gets past the public persona to tell how "the quiet little girl from the house on Elm Place" became the "richest self-made businesswoman in America." While Byron acknowledges that Stewart has a good side, there's not much evidence of it here; much of the book focuses on the darker aspects of Stewart's private life that were first popularized in Jerry Oppenheimer's mean-spirited Just Desserts. Unlike Oppenheimer's account, however, Byron keeps the mudslinging in check by also chronicling her amazing business success as "one of the most potent and effective brands in the history of American marketing." He details her relationships with Kmart, Group W, and Time-Warner, noting that her maneuvering to buy her company back from Time-Warner was "easily the greatest financial coup in the history of American publishing." The result is an interesting and often scandalous story of a woman who proves to be far more complicated than the image her media empire projects. --Harry C. Edwards

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:53 -0400)

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