PRODUCT OVERVIEW
- ISBN 9781501174445
- Categories Business and Economics, BX, BXOS, H/C, NF BIZ, Non-Fiction, Non-Fiction: Personal Development
- Author(s) Nancy Koehn
- Publisher Scribner Book Company
- Pages 517
- Format Hardcover
- Dimensions 24.1cm x 3.8cm x 16.5cm
- Weight 0.735 kg
product description
Harvard Business School historian Nancy Koehn, examines five masters of crisis: explorer Ernest Shackleton; Abraham Lincoln; abolitionist Frederick Douglass; Nazi-resisting clergyman Dietrich Bonhoeffer; and environmental crusader Rachel Carson.What do such disparate figures have in common? Why do their extraordinary stories continue to amaze and inspire? Nancy Koehn offers a remarkable template by which to measure our aspirations and, also, to judge those in our time to whom we've given our trust.Featuring "five stand-alone case studies that are well-written and interesting" (The New York Times), Koehn begins each section by showing her protagonist on the precipice of a great crisis: Shackleton marooned on an Antarctic ice floe; Lincoln on the verge of seeing the Union collapse; escaped slave Douglass facing possible capture; Bonhoeffer agonizing over how to counter absolute evil with faith; Carson racing against the cancer ravaging her in a bid to save the planet. Readers then learn about each person’s childhood and see the individual growing - step by step - into the person he or she will ultimately become. Significantly, as we follow each leader’s against-all-odds journey, we begin to glean an essential truth: leaders are not born but made. In a book dense with epiphanies, the most galvanizing one may be that the power and courage to lead resides in each of us.