Reeve Lindbergh is the author of several books for adults and children. They include the memoir of her childhood and youth, Under a Wing, No More Words, a description of the last years of her mother, Anne Morrow Lindbergh, and Forward From Here, a memoir about entering her sixties. She lives with her husband, Nat Tripp, and several animals on a farm in northern Vermont.
Nancy Jacobsen Rocky Mountain News Lindbergh's youngest daughter
delves into her mother's final two years, detailing the poignant,
melancholic, and sometimes humorous emotions she felt while caring
for the elderly woman....A loving tribute to mother, author, and
woman.
Meg Laughlin The Miami Herald Intimate [and] down-to-earth...funny
and engaging...honest.
Nancy Jacobsen Rocky Mountain News Lindbergh's youngest
daughter delves into her mother's final two years, detailing the
poignant, melancholic, and sometimes humorous emotions she felt
while caring for the elderly woman....A loving tribute to mother,
author, and woman.
Meg Laughlin The Miami Herald Intimate [and]
down-to-earth...funny and engaging...honest.
The publishing industry's newest genre the dot-com memoir sees its latest offering in Kuo's account of his tenure at "e-tailer" Value America. Kuo joined the company as senior v-p of communications in the spring of 2001, shortly after the company's IPO made prospective millionaires of its shareholders. But the company couldn't live up to its hype: despite claims of an "inventoryless" retail revolution (shipping directly from manufacturers to consumers), Value America was chronically unable to track orders, slow in delivering shipments and wracked by internal dissent. Still, this was the dot-manic golden moment, when the prospect of making "gold simply by peddling sand" was too alluring (even "somehow erotic"). Eventually, of course, Value America declared bankruptcy, in August 2000. Kuo expertly grafts a dramatic sensibility onto this familiar boom-and-bust story, drafting exchanges between Value America's major players like scenes in a novel. Craig Winn, the company's charismatic, ambitious, fatally flawed hero-founder, seems worthy of a Greek tragedy. This entertaining, novelistic approach does much to hide the book's single disappointment: Kuo apparently wasn't very important to Value America's fortunes. He worked there for less than a year; aside from a brief prologue, he doesn't personally appear for almost 90 pages, three years after the company's founding. His imaginative reconstruction (quotations, eyewitness accounts, near-omniscient observations) may bother readers concerned with historical accuracy. But those vicariously seeking the thrill of the 20th century's most dynamic business period will find Kuo a good storyteller and an engaging guide. (Oct. 15) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
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