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Business books that are a sure bet
Industries rise and fall, as do nations. Successful capitalism requires decline as well as creation. All this carries cost, as real people sometimes are lost in all the stopping and starting, the ending and renewal. But it seems that very dynamism and freedom to change is what allows economics to grow. Steel gives way to computer software, railroads take a back seat, and Internet commerce is born. And so on. |
REVIEWS BY NEAL LIPSCHUTZ
But as New York Times reporter Timothy L. O'Brien ably demonstrates in his wide-ranging survey of a growth industry, gambling is still different. "It depends upon and profits from the ineffable longing people have to change their lives in an instant, as if they were rubbing a magic lantern. Amid all the competing data and studies introduced by casino gambling's critics and proponents is the fact that gambling can be an enormously destructive force in many communities and in many lives." O'Brien's book, due in October, is Bad Bet: The Inside Story of the Glamour, Glitz, and Danger of America's Gambling Industry. The author starts with a description of gambling's newest frontier: the Internet. The legality of U.S.-based gambling cyberspace sites hasn't yet arrived, but there already are sites with offshore homes. Like much commerce in cyberspace, gambling is in its infancy, perhaps not even that far along. But consider the potential: relatively anonymous gambling without ever having to leave the glow of your personal computer. Until your credit card limit is hit, of course. If Internet gambling ever becomes widespread, it has huge implications for American society. From there, Mr. O'Brien takes us on tours of Las Vegas, Atlantic City, the horse racetracks of Kentucky, and Wall Street, among other venues. (It's to the author's credit that he acknowledges that some of the activity on what is generically called Wall Street -- namely, securities investing -- can bear a striking resemblance to gambling, regardless of socially acceptable defenses about capital formation for growing businesses.) Whatever the locale, Mr. O'Brien provides interesting historical context as well as present-day reality. His traditional reporting is interspersed with first-person life stories from some whose lives have been overtaken by gambling. After detailing the pluses and minuses of legal gambling in Atlantic City, once seen as a way to rejuvenate a depressed city, Mr. O'Brien concludes: "But twenty years into its waltz with gambling, Atlantic City is still a dour, troubled town." He chronicles the rise of state-inspired gambling (lotteries) and details the decline of gambling at the racetrack, that erstwhile sport of kings. The problem with the track, in essence, is that things move too slowly. Today's gamblers can find a lot more action at a slot machine. Mr. O'Brien has produced a well-researched and cleanly written guide to a big business that still leaves many Americans ambivalent. That may always be the case. The reporting is strong, but the book would have benefited from a bit more analysis and point of view based on the plethora of facts. The growth of gambling is one example of our increasingly post-industrial economy. Sure, someone has to build slot machines and card tables, but gambling is at least a kindred spirit to that increasing number of economic sectors where no one actually produces anything.
The Inside Story of the Glamour, Glitz, and Danger of America's Gambling Industry By Timothy L. O'Brien Times Books, $25 ISBN 0812928075
Reiman's overriding point in this book is a good one, and a hopeful one, in this increasingly competitive economy: original thought still matters. Yes, things are digitized and computerized. Apparent advances in production or services are matched after an ever-smaller cycle of advantage, more and more businesses seem interchangeable, but ideas still can matter. Or as Mr. Reiman says in his always upbeat, inspirational style, "Today currency is the idea, but tomorrow ideas will be the currency." Mr. Reiman tells his own story, interwoven with broad ideas and snippets from the unusual and progressive policies at his current company. He was a traditional advertising executive, now he's the head of BrightHouse, the ideas company. No penny for your thoughts at this firm. A thorough "ideation" session from BrightHouse can cost a client $450,000, "with some contracts exceeding $1 million for thinking," Mr. Reiman writes.
Creating Ideas That Revitalize Your Business, Career and Life By Joey Reiman Longstreet, $20 ISBN 1563524694
A Practical Guide to Making Better Decisions By John S. Hammond, Ralph L. Keeney, and Howard Raiffa Harvard Business School Press, $22.50 ISBN 0875848575
All the subjects were quite open with Ms. Rudolph, who delves far beyond the business realities to seek the connection between the professional and the personal, the non-financial value of work to a person's sense of worth. For so many years AT&T was a monolith, a unique American entity that more than most commercial concerns projected the illusion of permanence. After all, it was the phone company. Ms. Rudolph writes, "The essential paternalism of the institution extended to both customers and employees. Join our family, and we will take care of you." In the end, most of Ms. Rudolph's subjects did just fine. They forged successful post-AT&T lives, helped by a vibrant economy even in the face of the downsizing trend. Ms. Rudolph wisely doesn't draw conclusions from her six. They are individuals, but even as each story is unique, they combine to provide a human face to the downsized waves who confronted the realities of our new economy. While it is wise to realize that there is little guaranteed permanence in the work world, that you should always have a contingency plan, keep your skills up to date, and so on, these new trends are also a little sad. If we maintain a detachment on the job, a place where we spend so much of our lives, there becomes significantly less time and fewer places to express the positive ranges of our humanity.
How Six People from AT&T Discovered the New Meaning of Work in a Downsized Corporate America By Barbara Rudolph The Free Press, $25 ISBN 0684842661
A host of new books deals with the intersection between personal life and financial life. That intersection usually lies at the house, which for most people represents their most valuable asset as well as a convenient place to hang their hat. Among the recent offerings are Home.ology: The Art of Buying the Right Home at the Right Price -- Every Time, by Carolyn Janik. There's also The Mortgage Kit, Fourth Edition, by Thomas C. Steinmetz and Home Office Know-How, by Jeffery D. Zbar. Dealing with more than just the house is Love, Marriage and Money: Understanding and Achieving Financial Compatibility Before -- and After -- You Say "I Do," by Gail Liberman and Alan Lavine.
The Art of Buying the Right Home at the Right Price -- Every Time By Carolyn Janik Kiplinger, $17.95 ISBN 0938721526
The Mortgage Kit
Home Office Know-How
Love, Marriage and Money
Neal Lipschutz is managing editor of Dow Jones News Service.
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