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Books > Humanities > History > History of specific subjects > History of specific institutions
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Willmar
(Hardcover)
Jason Grabinger
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R781
R653
Discovery Miles 6 530
Save R128 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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An unlikely bookseller in New York City became the leading dealer
in rare Western Americana for most of the twentieth century. After
working in western-U.S. and South American gold mines at the turn
of the twentieth century, Edward Eberstadt (1883-1958) returned to
his home in New York City in 1907. Through luck and happenstance,
he purchased an old book for fifty cents that turned out to be a
rare sixteenth-century Mexican imprint. From this bit of
serendipity, Eberstadt quickly became one of the leading western
Americana rare book dealers. In this book Michael Vinson tells the
story of how Edward Eberstadt & Sons developed its legendary
book collection, which formed the backbone of many of today's top
western Americana archives. Although the firm's business records
have not survived, Edward and his sons, Charles and Lindley, were
all prodigious letter writers, and nearly every collector kept his
or her correspondence. Drawing upon these letters and on his own
extensive experience in the rare book trade, Vinson gives the
reader a vivid sense of how the commerce in rare books and
manuscripts unfolded during the era of the Eberstadts, particularly
in the relationships between dealers and customers. He explores the
backstory that scholars of art history and museology have pursued
in recent decades: the assembling of cultural treasures, their
organization for use, and the establishment of institutions to
support that use. His work describes the important role this key
bookselling firm played in the western Americana trade from the
early 1900s to Eberstadt & Sons' dissolution in 1975. From Yale
University and the American Antiquarian Society to the Newberry
Library and the Huntington Library, the firm of Edward Eberstadt
& Sons has left its mark in western Americana repositories
across the nation. Told here for the first time, the Eberstadt
story reveals how one family's business and legacy have shaped the
study of the American West.
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Stuckey's
(Hardcover)
'Tim Hollis
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R770
R641
Discovery Miles 6 410
Save R129 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In less than three decades, Nokia emerged from Finland to lead the
mobile phone revolution. It grew to have one of the most
recognizable and valuable brands in the world and then fell into
decline, leading to the sale of its mobile phone business to
Microsoft. This book explores and analyzes that journey and distils
observations and learning points for anyone keen to understand what
drove Nokia's amazing success and sudden downfall. With privileged
access to Nokia's senior managers over the last twenty years
followed by a more concerted research agenda from 2015, the authors
describe and analyze, the various stages in Nokia's journey. The
book describes leaders making strategic and organizational
decisions, their behavior and interactions, and how they succeeded
and failed to inspire and engage their employees. Perhaps most
intriguingly, it opens the proverbial 'black box' of why and how
things actually happen at the top of organizations. Why did things
fall apart? To what extent were avoidable mistakes made? Did the
world around Nokia change too fast for it to adapt? And, did
Nokia's success contain the seeds of its failure?
The revelatory saga of Pixar's rocky start and improbable success
After Steve Jobs was dismissed from Apple in the early 1990s, he turned his attention to a little-known graphics company he owned called Pixar. One day, out of the blue, Jobs called Lawrence Levy, a Harvard-trained lawyer and executive to whom he had never spoken before. He hoped to persuade Levy to help him pull Pixar back from the brink of failure.
This is the extraordinary story of what happened next: how Jobs and Levy concocted and pulled off a highly improbable plan that transformed Pixar into one of Hollywood's greatest success stories. Levy offers a masterful, firsthand account of how Pixar rose from humble beginnings, what it was like to work so closely with Jobs, and how Pixar's story offers profound lessons that can apply to many aspects of our lives.
New York Travel Writers Society 2013 Annual Report By New York
Travel Writers Society Board of Directors
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