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The Motley Fool May 29, 2008 Jack Uldrich |
Foolish Book Review: "Get There Early" Bob Johansen's new book, Get There Early: Sensing the Future to Compete in the Present, makes a strong case for how thinking ahead can benefit a business. |
Outside May 2008 Steven Kotler |
Rebel in Ray-Bans A new bio of Miki Dora, the original maverick surfer, gets his story right. |
Outside May 2008 Jason Daley |
Forget Me Not Jennifer Lowe-Anker, the wife of a mountaineer killed in an avalanche, shares the harrowing tale from her perspective in this new book. |
The Motley Fool May 14, 2008 Ryan Fuhrmann |
Warren Buffett's Recommended-Reading List What to read to get ahead in the investing world. |
Global Services May 12, 2008 Imrana Khan |
Outsmart! The book "Outsmart!" by outsourcing advisor James Champy will help companies reinvent the way they compete. |
Reason May 2008 Katherine Mangu-Ward |
Pirate Capitalism In The Pirate's Dilemma: How Youth Culture Is Reinventing Capitalism, author Matt Mason discusses that piracy is now an accepted business model, and competitive enough to be a major threat to traditional businesses going forward. |
Reason May 2008 Michael C. Moynihan |
Flight of the Neocons In They Knew They Were Right: The Rise of the Neocons, Jacob Heilbrunn, a senior editor at the conservative journal The National Interest, retraces the history of Norman Podhoretz's movement through its wilderness years to its ignominious decline post-Iraq. |
CRM May 2008 Lior Arussy |
The Excellence Myth In an exclusive excerpt from his new book Excellence Every Day, the author examines the truth and crippling fictions behind the value of experience. |
AskMen.com Michael Hodges |
5 Things You Didn't Know: AK-47 The author of AK-47: The Story of the People's Gun lets us in on a few little-known facts about the AK-47 he uncovered while researching his work. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2008 Kenneth R. Foster |
In Defense of Dumb A review of Donald A. Norman's book The Design of Future Things, which makes the case that some systems may be too smart for our own good. |
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