Being Dead is Bad for Business by Stanley A. Weiss
''Rumbustious, warm and disarmingly candid … This is an astonishing life, recounted with humor and wit.''
--The Wall Street Journal
Being Dead Is Bad For Business
ISBN: 978-0956238771
RRP: £15
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Most of us spend our lives talking ourselves out of things. But what could you accomplish if you never held yourself back?
What if, despite your fears, you went for broke every time?You might live a life as extraordinary as the one Stanley Weiss has lived for nearly a century.
A skinny Jewish kid from Philadelphia training to fight and likely die in the U.S. invasion of Japan in 1945, Stanley Weiss came home to the death of his loving but weak father, who left his mother penniless. Vowing on the spot not to let his insecurities limit him as they had his father, Weiss pledged that his mother would never have to worry. Later, a humiliation suffered at the hands of his wealthy girlfriend's famous father ignited in him a determination to better himself in every way and live life to the fullest.
Inspired by a Humphrey Bogart movie, Weiss moved to a foreign country to hunt for treasure—where Rule Number One was ''Don't Die.'' Along the way, his zest for living has taken him from the company of legendary artists and poets in Mexico, to writers and beatniks in 1960s San Francisco and Hollywood; from drunken nights with a notorious spy to friendships with three of the men who played James Bond; from glamorous parties in Gstaad and Phuket to power politics in London and Washington, DC. A story of growth, tenacious focus, and good humor, it stretches from the days of ''Don't Die'' to Weiss's response when asked why business executives were interested in preventing nuclear war: ''Being dead is bad for business.''
For those who believe the world is shaped by ordinary people who push themselves to do extraordinary things, Stanley Weiss's story will inspire and surprise while reminding us all that being dead is bad for business—and being boring is bad for life.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Stanley A. Weiss is the Founding Chairman of Business Executives for National Security (BENS) and former Chairman of American Premier, Inc., a mining, refractories, chemicals, and mineral processing company.
A former fellow at Harvard’s Center for International Affairs, Mr. Weiss is the recipient of an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from Point Park University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He currently serves on the Board of Directors for Premier Chemicals and is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, the American Ditchley Foundation, the International Institute for Strategic Studies, and the Royal Institution in the UK.
Weiss has written widely on public policy matters in The Huffington Post, the International Herald Tribune, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and The Washington Times. His book, Manganese: The Other Uses, is the definitive work on the non-metallurgical uses of manganese.Weiss is married with two children. He divides his time between London and Gstaad, and his office in Washington, DC, and still travels extensively.
REVIEWS
''Stanley Weiss's memoir is three books in one: It's a businessman's story of striking it rich (literally, since he was a treasure hunter); a history of the second half of the twentieth century; and an MRI of the author's character development. Well written with great storytelling, the book is funny, poignant, and almost breathlessly candid about Weiss's own shortcomings. A rich, compelling read about a self-made man.''
--Lesley Stahl, correspondent for 60 Minutes and bestselling author of Becoming Grandma''A great read about a great life! Stanley Weiss's reflections are wonderfully introspective, refreshingly candid, remarkably self-effacing, and hugely fascinating—as well as repeatedly informed by his ultimate insight, that dying is bad for business.''
--General (Ret) David Petraeus, former director of the CIA and commander of coalition forces in Iraq (2006-7) and Afghanistan (2010-11)
''Wow. After reading his memoir, I now see that I previously knew less than 5 percent of Stanley Weiss. He is a multi-faceted, peripatetic, well-read, energetic, broadly connected, multi-movied bon vivant and more. Awesome.''
--Josh S. Weston, honorary chairman of ADP
''Just like the film characters he reveres, Stanley Weiss brings us a story of charm, courage, and adventure—and he tells it all with his trademark wit and insight. It is a masterful book.''
--Lord Carrington, foreign secretary to Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and the last living member of Winston Churchill's cabinet
''Being Dead Is Bad for Business is an engrossing read. It offers a clear-eyed, engaging look at one serial entrepreneur's journey from a driven, starry-eyed youth to an international business executive and philanthropist.''
--Foreword Clarion Reviews
''Weiss recounts his life with vigor and possesses the easy narrative skills of a seasoned raconteur. The depth and width of his experiences over the course of the last half-century ensures that the book glitters with anecdotal diamonds.''
--Kirkus Reviews
''Not surprisingly, very touching, quite moving, and true. . . . it's very good.''
--Taki Theodoracopulos, longtime columnist for The Spectator and publisher of Taki's Magazine
"Of the many talents that have helped make Stanley A. Weiss one of the biggest minerals magnates of his era, his greatest is his knack for making friends. He made them in Mexico, after driving there from Philadelphia as a young man in the aftermath of World War II in search of his treasure. He made them in bars (with Richard Burton in his heyday) and on trans-Atlantic boats (with Guy Burgess before the British diplomat was outed as a Soviete spy and with Harry Truman after he had retired as president). He hosted John Kenneth Galbraith and Bill Buckley at his home in Gstaad, Switzerland - one of several he owns - as they argued over the merits of liberalism and conservatism. He has entertained no fewer than three Hames Bonds. Jackie Kennedy Onassis once made him blush by telling him he was "very handsome." Oh, and he met Nelson Mandela in a urinal, admittedly in Davos."
--Xan Smiley The Wall Street Journal