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How Starbucks Saved My Life : A Son of Privilege Learns to Live Like Everyone ElseBlog this item
  • 1 person find this helpful
    • It's all about perception.
    • This book is making me want to go get a job at Starbucks. I think as we get older many people begin to realize that surrounding ourselves with good people and learning to appreciate the basic things in life can bring more happiness than a high profile career and lots of money. There is something to ... Continue

      This book is making me want to go get a job at Starbucks. I think as we get older many people begin to realize that surrounding ourselves with good people and learning to appreciate the basic things in life can bring more happiness than a high profile career and lots of money. There is something to be said for just really loving your job and enjoying going to work everyday. Also being able to find the good in the things around us instead of always dwelling on the bad. Furthermore, our jobs do not define us as people, it's our character that does that.

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  • Angie (angiebro) said on Mar 1, 2008
    • Not my favorite flavor
    • Michael Gates Gill was born with the proverbial silver spoon in his mouth and for many years led a fairly pampered existence as a successful advertising executive. Fired in his mid-50’s allegedly due to age discrimination, he made a series of disastrous choices which led to his life spinning out of ... Continue

      Michael Gates Gill was born with the proverbial silver spoon in his mouth and for many years led a fairly pampered existence as a successful advertising executive. Fired in his mid-50’s allegedly due to age discrimination, he made a series of disastrous choices which led to his life spinning out of control, while he clung to the fringes of personal & financial stability. Voila: follows the commencement of his relationship with Starbucks, where for the first time in his life he learns the meaning of hard and sometimes menial labor. I was initially drawn to this story because of my voracious love of coffee, and while I admire the basic premise of his story, it sometimes comes across as a little too contrived. Mr. Gill likes to name-drop a bit too much, telling of his former glamorous life and goings-on with the likes of Queen Elizabeth, Frank Sinatra, and James Thurber, to name just a few. I read where Tom Hanks had bought the film rights to the story. Maybe I'm being too hard on Mr. Gill, but his story reminds me of many high priced coffees, a lot of hype but not much flavor.

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  • Marion the librarian said on Feb 9, 2009 about the Paperback edition

Book Description

The riches-to-rags true story of an advertising executive who had it all, then lost it all-and was finally redeemed by his new job, and his twenty-eight-year-old boss, at Starbucks.

Book Details
English Books
Rating: (28)
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Hardcover 266 Pages
ISBN-10: 1592402860
ISBN-13: 9781592402861
Publisher: Gotham
Pub date: Sep 20, 2007
Also available as: Mass Market Paperback and Paperback
In other languages:
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