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Citizen Coors: An American Dynasty
 
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Citizen Coors: An American Dynasty [Hardcover]

Dan Baum (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 22, 2000

  Citizen Coors is the riveting saga of an American dynasty. From the moment the destitute Prussian Adolph Coors stows away on a Baltimore-bound ship in 1868 to the worldwide expansion of the billion-dollar Coors Brewing Company, Citizen Coors is a headlong American tale of triumph over bare-knuckle competition. The Coors family does it the old-fashioned way, through fearsome devotion to product, rejection of modern marketing, and refusing to borrow so much as a nickel.


  But the family almost rides its principles into the ground. "Nobody will ever choose a beer on the basis of a thirty-second ad," Bill Coors is fond of saying at a time when his two main competitors, Anheuser-Busch and Miller,  are spending upward of a billion dollars a year on ads. He won't even allow a ring-pull can.  The brewery's decline and recovery are dizzying.


But Citizen Coors is more than a business story. Here is Adolph, the founder,in 1929, distraught over Prohibition, hurling himself to his death from a hotel balcony. Here is Bill,ten years later, yearning for the wider world but forced back to the brewery by a single glance from his father. Here is Joe, Jr., raised to rule yet suddenly banished for marrying without permission. Here is Peter, prevented from rescuing the company precisely because he has been trained to do so. Here is kidnapping and murder. Here are generations of Coors men broken against the iron will of their fathers. Here is a second suicide, eerily similar to the first.

Citizen Coors is finally a chronicle of how America was shaped politically in the last three decades of the twentieth century. For along with the Coors family's adherence to handshake integrity and old-world craft came some less roseate ideals from the nineteenth century: that disparity of wealth is proper, that government efforts to achieve social equality are illegitimate, that the Bible is the rule book for intimate conduct, and that capital must never bow to labor. The Coors family forever changed the American political landscape by creating the Heritage Foundation and a right-wing TV network, by financing the conservative shift in Congress, and by being early backers of a politically ambitious B-movie actor named Ronald Reagan.


  In retaliation, blacks, feminists, unions, gays, and environmentalists came together to bash Coors in perhaps the most effective consumer boycott of modern times--a boycott that continues to hobble the company.


  Based on more than 150 interviews, Citizen Coors serves up a powerful cocktail of beer and politics. Dan Baum, a former reporter for the Wall Street Journal, captures in this rollicking narrative the genius, eccentricity, and tragic weaknesses of the remarkable Coors family.With enough private dramas to put them on par with the Ewings of Dallas, and enough business crises to keep them constantly in the business hot-seat, the ultra-right-wing Coors of Golden, Colorado, represent one of the more riveting family sagas of our time. Their billion-dollar empire grew out of a single brewery begun in 1873, but it wasn't long before the family became known as much for their right-wing politics as their beer.

The third generation of Coors men financed the birth of the Heritage Foundation, which jump-started the Reagan revolution. Old-fashioned about business and equally dubious of new ideas, they consistently ignored the importance of marketing until they were forced to, finally introducing the "Silver Bullet," and improved their image with unions and minorities only after they were compelled to do so by years of boycotts. Former Wall Street Journal reporter Dan Baum captures the eccentricity and foibles of this family and company in this fast-paced tale of vivid characters in business and politics.



Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

The Coors Brewing Company in Golden, Colorado, is one of those prototypical American businesses that sprang from the efforts of a single-minded individual to become a dominant force in its industry. The elements that led to its ascension make quite a story, too: a destitute but hard-driving immigrant founder; kidnapping, suicides, and murder; secretive, right-wing politics and boisterous consumer boycotts; and, to top it off, an aristocratic ruling family that never dealt well with outsiders. To make sense of it all, former Wall Street Journal reporter Dan Baum interviewed more than 150 people, excluding, unfortunately, the primary family members, who still routinely refuse to talk to outsiders. Nevertheless, Baum tells this colorful Hollywood-esque tale in a comprehensive and compelling manner. He shows with considerable insight how the corporate and familial tone was set early by patriarch Adolph, a figure so domineering he "was still effectively running the company more than 60 years" after his death. And he shows with equal clarity why Peter, the heir, ultimately turned to an outsider to help the company address its competition in a way befitting a prototypical American business. An interesting tale, well told. --Howard Rothman

From Publishers Weekly

Even the most committed liberals may feel a twinge of sympathy for this famously conservative family, whose patriarch, a German immigrant named Adolph Coors, founded a regional brewery in Golden, Colo., in 1874. It was the senior Coors's belief (and that of his son and grandsons) that the high quality of his beer was its best advertisement; indeed, Coors survived both Prohibition and the Depression to become the dominant beer in the western U.S. But as competitors, led by Anheuser-Busch, began spending millions of dollars on marketing, Coors made only token attempts at promotion; its market share steadily eroded, even as the company tried to expand from a regional to a national brand. With problems mounting, Peter Coors turned the reins of his grandfather's company over to Leo Kiely, a former president of Frito-Lay, in 1993. But the Coors story is about much more than beer: at its core is an innovative, hardworking yet dysfunctional family whose legacy has included two suicides (including Adolph himself), a kidnapping and murder, and several estranged children. The family's most ardent conservative was Joe Coors, whose money not only helped launch the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, but also helped propel Reagan into the White House and allowed Coors to have a hand in the appointment of James Watt as secretary of the interior. Baum, a former reporter for the Wall Street Journal, has melded the many facets of the Coors story into an engrossing tale of one of America's most secretive and, for a time, most influential families. Photos not seen by PW. Agent, Kris Dahl, ICM. 7-city author tour. (Apr.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: William Morrow; First Edition edition (March 22, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0688154484
  • ISBN-13: 978-0688154486
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.4 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,243,674 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I'm a writer of non-fiction, the author of Nine Lives: Death and Life in New Orleans (Spiegel & Grau, 2009); Smoke and Mirrors: The War on Drugs and the Politics of Failure (Little, Brown 1996); and Citizen Coors: An American Dynasty (Morrow/HarperCollins, 2000). I've been a staff writer for the New Yorker, and have written for Rolling Stone, Playboy, the New York Times Magazine and many others. I work with my wife, Margaret Knox, and we live in Boulder, Colorado, with our daughter, Rosa. You can read about us -- and avail yourself of our editing and writing coaching -- at www.danbaum.com, www.margaretknox.com, or www.freelancersclinic.com

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

41 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Destined to be a Classic, March 25, 2000
By 
Charles M. Nobles (Tulsa, OK United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Citizen Coors: An American Dynasty (Hardcover)
Not all newspaper reporters can write and not all writers are good newspaper reporters. However, every once in a while someone comes along that can do both, sometimes exceptionally well. Such a person is Dan Baum, formerly a reporter for both the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and The Wall Street Journal. He is the author of the highly acclaimed Smoke and Mirrors,an explosive account of the so-called war on drugs, and this marvelous work on a Colorado company that many people love to hate. This book, an historical narrative of the Adolph Coors Company, a family and business legend in America, is destined to be a classic and will be the standard by which all other efforts are judged. It provides a real eye-opening insight into the corporate world of politics, sex, religion, money, drugs, cover-ups and environmental degradation that will stay with you long after you have finished the book. Its all here. The story of Adolph Coors, the immigrant that made a fortune against all odds and left a legacy that some say still haunts the company to this day. Baum notes that "Even though Adolph Coors died in 1929, he was still effectively running the company more than sixty years later." The results of a 1929 business philosophy on a national company in 1999 will leave you astounded. There is a well written overview of the Political Left and the American Labor movements protracted boycott of Coors as well as the rise of the conservative movement and the founding of the Heritage Foundation. The prominent role of the Coors family in the success of the Reagan revolution, and its impact on the company, is riveting and revealing. The Coors family were brilliant engineers that invented the aluminum beverage can; made what many beer connoisseurs believed to be an excellent product; refused to incur debt; and became rich by demanding a quality product, often at the expense of profit. At the same time, the results of their refusal to employ modern marketing techniques and compete with the likes of Miller's Brewing and Budweiser is absolutely amazing. The story of the Coors family and company is complex and at times maddening. Regardless of your political persuasion; liberal, conservative, or independent, this book will give you something to cheer about and will keep you up late at night turning pages. It is highly readable, meticulously researched and a welcome addition to the history of business in America, not to mention the political implications. It is a spellbinding story of a Colorado company with truly national ramifications. That it is written by a writer of the caliber of Dan Baum is a real bonus for the reader.
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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars If you liked Titan...you'll love Citizen Coors, April 27, 2000
This review is from: Citizen Coors: An American Dynasty (Hardcover)
...Congratulations to Dan Baum for making Citizen Coors a very enjoyable read. His research is excellent and evident and his story telling is intriguing. ...The Coors family has it all: money, murder, family dissent, recovery. I found it to be much, much more than a "business" read (although it does give some excellent examples of different business philosophies and why they did/did not work.) I highly recommend this fascinating book.

C. Roberts New Jersey

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Read on Tap, July 18, 2000
This review is from: Citizen Coors: An American Dynasty (Hardcover)
There's nothing more compelling than a nonfiction saga that is sculpted to flow like a classic piece of fiction. As a story, this book by Dan Baum has all the ingredients of the great potboilers: Early struggles of the dynamic immigrant in the Wild West of the 19th Century, who ultimately creates a wildly successful company, the first son who carries on in the manner of his father yet bends a bit to accomodate the 20th Century, followed by a mass of problems created by the third and fourth generations. Business, politics, sex (well, adultery), tragedy, and a staggering amount of mistakes by one gene pool make this book a fabulous read. It arrived at my door on a Saturday, by Sunday morning I was ordering Baum's previous book!
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