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The Editors of Fortune

Author of The Exploding Metropolis

49+ Works 307 Members 7 Reviews

About the Author

Works by The Editors of Fortune

The Exploding Metropolis (1958) 89 copies, 2 reviews
Fortune: Secrets of Greatness (2006) 23 copies, 1 review
Fortune Adviser 1999 (1998) 18 copies
Working Smarter (1982) 12 copies
Arms and the Men (1934) 2 copies
Fortune Adviser 1997 (1997) 2 copies
Japan 1 copy
The Art of Success (1956) 1 copy, 1 review
Markets (1968) 1 copy

Associated Works

Modern English Readings (1942) — Contributor — 60 copies

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Common Knowledge

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Reviews

7 reviews
The authors are "journalists", and they clearly interviewed their subjects and informed sources. However candid the subjects appear to have been, no effort went into digging into contradictions and I found their deference almost alarming. It is not surprising that this work does not "expose" a single one of these predators in any way, although most of them have mythologized themselves and clearly indulged in a number of outright fabrications.

These Biographies of American men -- all white show more males -- were published in the Magazine and are nicely comprehended together at the mid-century. They shared an outlook, an attitude, deeply committed to aquisition of money. As a book, it fails to reveal what definition was used in the selection of "successful" men, and we never discover the "art" practiced in seizing money.

We find the same "attitude", perhaps in a far more resourceful and intense manifestation, among the gang leaders who learn how to survive in slums. Grabbing stuff, and stealing what can be stolen, does not become an "art" when it is practiced by wealthy white males. These are accounts, often quite detailed, of thuggery.
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I have owned this book for a long time. I realize that I still think about this book and its look at the urban scene in the United States in the late 1950's. Cities were seen as becoming more impersonal and oerwhelmed by overgrowth that affeced city and suburbs alike. There are two chapters by William Whyte who helped Philadelphia leap better into the postwar era, even if belatedly. Jane Jacobs wrote the last chapter, focusing not so much on urban village life, but instead creating more show more personal spaces in dowtown areas. The theme I most concentrated on was the effext of the car on city travel. Public transit was already not doing well in most cities and it is interesting to relook at this data 60 years later. An amazing realization is that crime was not deemed as an important problem inthe 1950's. Only two small paragraphs deal with policing. Citie are now coming full circle wih the lower crime rates, the return to dowtown for residential living, and the many streetcar and light rail project. show less
I love this sort of stuff, but it really is just Fortune Magazine bite-sized pieces and nothing too substantive or gripping. Stick with the full-size exposes.
Scandal! is a rehash of articles from the earliest days of Fortune Magazine to the present. Many of the articles haven't aged well as events unfolded after their publication. For example, the Enron chapter ends before any of the executives were sentenced. Small follow-up sections at the end of every chapter attempt to remedy this, but I found myself wanting to know more of the consequences of various scandals. Also, poor marks go to the editors for numerous copy-editing misses.

Awards

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Statistics

Works
49
Also by
1
Members
307
Popularity
#76,699
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
7
ISBNs
14
Languages
1

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