The captivating inside story of the man who helmed National
Geographic over the course of six decades is a front-row seat to
iconic feats of exploration, from the successful hunt for the
Titanic to Jane Goodall's field studies, offering a rare portrait
of one of the most iconic media empires in history and making an
impassioned argument for our enduring need to know and care for our
world. Though his career path had been paved by four generations of
his family before him, Gilbert M. Grosvenor left his own mark on
the National Geographic Society, founded in 1888 and recognised the
world over by its ubiquitous yellow border. In an unflinchingly
honest memoir as big as the world and all that is in it, Grosvenor
shows us what it was like to "grow up Geographic" in a family home
where explorers like Robert Peary, Louis Leakey, and Jane Goodall
regularly crossed the threshold. As staff photographer, editor in
chief and then president of the organisation, Grosvenor oversaw the
diversification into television, film, books, as well as its
flagship magazine, which under his tenure reached a peak
circulation of nearly 11 million. He also narrates the shift from a
nonprofit, family-focused enterprise to the more corporate,
bottom-line focused world of publishing today. For Grosvenor,
running National Geographic wasn't just a job. It was a legacy,
motivated by a passion not just to leave the world a better place,
but to motivate others to do so, too. Filled with world travel,
charismatic explorers, and the complexities of running a publishing
empire, A MAN OF THE WORLD is the story of one man, a singular
family business, and the changing face of American media.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!