Senin, 25 Februari 2013

{PRETITLE} In My Shoes: A Memoir {POSTTITLE}

Rating: (21 reviews)
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ISBN : B00F3KEC7E
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Format: PDF

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A candid business narrative and memoir from the founder of Jimmy Choo.

Tamara Mellon made a fortune building Jimmy Choo into a billion-dollar fashion brand. She became the prime minister's trade envoy and was honored by the Queen with the Order of the British Empire - yet it's her personal glamour that keeps her an object of global media fascination. Vogue photographed her wedding; Vanity Fair covered her divorce and the criminal trial that followed. Harper's Bazaar toured her London town house and her New York mansion, right down to the closets. And the Wall Street Journal hinted at the real red meat: the three private equity deals, the relentless battle between "the suits" and "the creatives", and Mellon's triumph against a brutally hostile takeover attempt.

In this candid memoir she shares the whole larger-than-life story, with genuinely shocking insider detail that has never been presented anywhere. From her troubled childhood to her time as a young editor at Vogue to her partnership with cobbler Jimmy Choo to her very public relationships, Mellon offers a gripping account of the episodes that have made her who she is today.

The result is a must listen for entrepreneurs, fashionistas, and anyone who loves a juicy true story about sex, drugs, money, power, high heels, and overcoming adversity.


Direct download links available for PRETITLE In My Shoes: A Memoir POSTTITLE
  • Audible Audio Edition
  • Listening Length: 8 hours and 31 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Penguin Audio
  • Audible.com Release Date: October 1, 2013
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B00F3KEC7E

{PRETITLE} In My Shoes: A Memoir {POSTTITLE}

While I read about 3-6 books a week, both for work (in publishing) and pleasure, most of the books I read are history/biography/memoirs that are about people who have made substantial contributions to the world. I have a weak place in my heart for women like Slim Keith, C..Z Guest, Babe Paley, Mona Von Bismark, Wallis Simpson all the way down to Athenais De Montespan, Madame Du Barry and Eleanor of Aquitaine. So, this book seemed like it would be entertaining, and a fun read. I was NOT looking for any self-help or career advice in it. I don't know why anyone would.
Having said that I must also say that I have almost NEVER written a review (good or bad) about a book I have read (either for work or for my own enjoyment)
Now:
Tamara Mellon and her "co-author" can't write well. Nor can they pull off making Tamara seem anything other than a horrid individual, albeit one who helped bring great shoes to the forefront of the world's attention. Unlike Andie Sachs in A Devil Wears Prada I give credit to the men and women who work in the fashion industry, and recognize it as an important business.
I have met and worked with many strong, independent women who have struggled (in many cases during harder times than the 1990s when women had it difficult for many reasons), and usually these women are...eccentric, and can be downright rude, brusque or even mean. However, Tamara not only comes off as all of those, but she's one other thing...whiny. She comes off like a wounded bird who has built up anger for so, so, so many people (whose names she loves to drop) that she "wrote" this book possibly on the advice of her therapist for some sort of catharsis.
With a reported exit of 135 million, Tamara takes you on her roller-coaster journey from washed out media executive to becoming one of the biggest names in retail. Her memoir is a riveting account of how she built the famous international luxury brand Jimmy Choo. She literally ‘tells all’; the family back stabbing, the private equity nightmares from start up to exit, and how she is structuring her new company based on the lessons she’s learned.

Three things really struck me throughout the book:

• Coming from a wealthy family is no guarantee of a charmed life. Tamara’s mother in particular controlled her with money. Not that she felt sorry for herself in any way – but it dispels the myth that coming from a rich family always means it is easy.

• Beware of what you are getting into with private equity. Of course they want an exit and will be completely focused on the EBITDA (Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization). This often comes at a price, as Tamara found out.

• Get good advisors, in particular a good lawyer. The time to get everything tied up is when there are no problems. Tamara trusted her family and to her detriment this backfired. While it is a tragedy that her mother ultimately betrayed her, the signs were there right from Tamara’s childhood that her mother was never going to act in her best interests. Because this is a mother/child relationship, and most children are relentless in hoping their parents will do the right thing by them, it’s understandable Tamara trusted her mother would treat her with integrity.

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