

Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.
Loading... The Taking of Getty Oil: Pennzoil, Texaco, and the Takeover Battle That… (edition 2017)by Steve Coll (Author)
Work InformationThe Taking of Getty Oil: The Full Story of the Most Spectacular - and Catastrophic - Takeover of All Time by Steve Coll
![]() None No current Talk conversations about this book. no reviews | add a review
A larger-than-life account of family, greed, and a courtroom showdown between Big Oil rivals from the New York Times-bestselling author of Private Empire. Pulitzer Prize-winning author Steve Coll is renowned for "his ability to take complicated, significant business stories and turn them into quick-reading engaging narratives" (Chicago Tribune). Coll is at the height of his talents in this "riveting" tale of one of the most spectacular--and catastrophic--corporate takeovers of all time (Newsday). As the head of a sprawling oil empire, J. Paul Getty was once the world's richest man. But by 1984, eight years after his death, Getty's legacy was in tatters: His children were locked in a bitter feud over the family trust and the company he founded was riven by boardroom turmoil. Then Pennzoil made an agreement with Getty's son, Gordon, to purchase Getty Oil. It was a done deal--until Texaco swooped in to claim the $10 billion prize. What followed was an epic legal battle that pit "good ole boy" J. Hugh Liedtke of Pennzoil against the Wall Street brokers behind Texaco's offer. The scandalous details of the case would shock the business world and change the landscape of the oil industry forever. With a large cast of colorful characters and the dramatic pacing of a novel, The Taking of Getty Oil is a "suspenseful" and "always intriguing" chronicle of one of the most fascinating chapters in American corporate history (Publishers Weekly). No library descriptions found. |
Popular covers
![]() GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)338.8Social sciences Economics Production Monopolies; TrustsLC ClassificationRatingAverage:![]()
Is this you?Become a LibraryThing Author. |
The more business experience and knowledge you have, the more likely you are to appreciate the nuances and complexities of what happened in the businesses and courtroom. The author does a good job of explaining some of the arcane information and technical jargon of Wall Street and Madison Avenue without making the story too simplistic for non-business experts. I think this is a great strength of the book because, beyond the narrative, a business person can learn much about what to do, and not to do, as a fiduciary, member of the board of directors, or executive. It should make one wise to the behavior and words that might reflect duplicity in others.
Beyond the book itself, the author had an excellent essay in the back of the book on the ethical use of dramatic dialogue in narrative non-fiction. He discusses his views on the proper and improper use of constructed dialogue including manipulating a reader by constructing a dialog that reflects the writer's bias. He provides great insight into the process of careful and ethical construction of non-fiction dialog that would be helpful to writers and non-fiction readers alike. (