This week I completed two books – one very good and one not very good. | |
The very good book is titled: “On Becoming A Leader” (2003©) and was written by Warren Bennis – updated version from the original published in 1989. Bennis is considered to be the “father” of the developed leader school. His mantra is that leaders are not born, they are made. Some are made by history, but Bennis goes farther in that he believes many (if not most) make themselves. They (leaders in process) have various ways of “making” themselves, but ultimately they follow similar paths to becoming a leader. The book is meant to lend framework to the path – partly to define the framework, but mostly to lay out the map for readers (leaders in process). | |
Shakespeare states: “Be not afraid of greatness; some are born great, some achieve greatness, and others have greatness thrust upon them.” This is a quote often seen when discussing how great leaders come to be. I believe all three are true for “historic” leaders and am not convinced that any one is more prevalent than the other two. I do feel that history and luck play the biggest role in “greatness”, though. | |
Bennis is firmly in the “achieving” camp. It should be pointed out there is a difference between “greatness” and “leadership” and Bennis is concerned with the latter and not the former. This book is his version of “how” to become a leader – the personal traits you need to develop, how you should lead, and how you must form your organization or how it will form you. There is a statement that great leaders understand themselves and “express” their nature fully. This is the part where I start to fall away from Bennis. While I can understand “warm-fuzzy psycho-babble”, it’s not my cup of tea. It simply doesn’t “resonate” with me. This may simply be because I’m not a “great” leader and I’m therefore not able to feel the “expressive” nature of great leadership hidden away in me. (But, I doubt it…) | |
Anyway, as negative as the preceding paragraphs sound, this is actually a VERY good book and I highly recommend it – not because I believe everything Bennis says, but rather because I love his use of language. I probably hope that being “fully expressive” is all it takes to be a great leader, because this implies I may still develop into a great leader myself. (But, I doubt it…) | |
By the way, this was another $2 clearance book at Half-Price Books (and worth ten times as much), and you’ll be seeing frequent quotes from the book in future posts. | |
The second book is titled: “Marathoning A-Z” and was written by Hal Higdon (2002©). The book is sub-titled: “500 Ways to Run Better, Faster,and Smarter“. The book is a series of alphabetically sorted snippets from his question and answer columns and emails about running. The book is a very fast read. This is partly because each offering truly is a snippet and partly because there is almost nothing stated which makes one pause to think. As such, I could not recommend this book to any but the most rank beginner of a runner. Even then I’d qualify the book to them by stating at least 20 to 30 of the items are repeated in a different alphabet letter. I’m not sure if this was meant to introduce humor or simply filler because you’ve promised the publisher 500 items. (I have a feeling it’s the latter…) Sadly, this was NOT a $2 book for me. It was $4.95 and I was over-charged about $4 in value vs cost. Save your money and check this out of a library. Better yet, just go out and start jogging. You’ll get more from jogging yourself than you will ever get from this book. | |
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On This Day In: | |
2022 | In My Defense… |
2021 | Mike Could Have Saved Us A Bundle On Border Walls |
Is It Too Late? | |
2020 | And Then There Was Yellow |
At This Moment | |
2019 | Sin Less Every Day |
2018 | Probably Only A Little Easier |
2017 | Stars Above |
2016 | Where Do You Stand? |
Health Update | |
2015 | Leaving On A Mid-Night Train |
2014 | Questioned Faith |
2013 | At Home In Fire |
2012 | A Tale Of Two Books |
More Meaning | |
2011 | Back At The Millstone |
To Learn, Teach | |
A Tale Of Two Books
February 10, 2012 by kmabarrett
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