Book Review: The Art of Doing: How Superachievers Do What They Do and How They Do It So Well by Camille Sweeney and Josh Gosfield

What do restaurateur David Chang, Yankee Hall of Fame catcher Yogi Berra, and opera diva Anna Netrebko have in common? They, and 33 others, are the "superahievers" profiled in the Camille Sweeney, Josh Gosfield book The Art of Doing: How Superachievers Do What They Do and How They Do It So Well. Success comes in different forms. It is achieved in different ways, and certainly one way to find out how it's done is to talk to the people that have managed to do it. With that as their basic assumption the husband and wife co-authors set about trying to interview a sampling of successful people from a variety of fields, business, the arts, sports, etc. Of course, not all "superachievers" were willing to take part in the venture, but 36 adventurous successful souls were, and each gets his, her or their (a case or two of group success) own individual chapter distilling the wheat from the chaff of their individual interviews.

After an introductory chapter in which the authors isolate and explain what they call the ten "most important strategies" for success they discovered in the course of their interviews, things like dedication, patience and testing, they go on to look at each the interviewees separately. All chapters follow the same format. They begin with an introductory passage introducing the subjects and explaining what they've accomplished in case some reader might lack might not know about their super achievements. A pithy kernel of wisdom called "Takeaway" is followed by ten—the authors somehow fond of that number—lengthier, but never long bits of further wisdom. Each of the chapters ends with a list of interesting facts about the interviewee (window display designer and all around "fabulous" personality Simon Doonan married his partner in 2008) and a list of facts about the interviewee's area of achievement (wealthy Babylonians powdered their hair with gold dust). None of the chapters runs more than seven or eight pages, so this is the kind of book that would sit comfortably in the magazine stand next to your commode.

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  • 1 - Dr Joseph S. Maresca

    Jan 31, 2013 at 5:17 am

    The hardest part about doing anything substantial is just getting started. The next hardest part is the continuous follow-up.

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