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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the most exciting tycoons of the industrial age
I first became aware of Charles Schwab when reading Andrew Carnegie's autobiography. Carnegie regarded Schwab as a prominent up and comer in industry for both his people skills as well as his work ethic; thus I knew he was someone I wanted to know more about. It is not often that a business book is difficult to put down, particularly one in the steel industry. Hessen...
Published on April 24, 2008 by TW

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Hope Kenneth Warren's bio is better
I read this book hoping for insight into the life of steel titan Charles Schwab equal to Wall's great biography of Schwab's benefactor, Andrew Carnegie. I found some interesting facts but not a lot of color. I wasn't quite sure whether there just wasn't that much genuinely interesting in his life, in addition to his being a successful corporate sort of guy, or whether...
Published on June 16, 2008 by Alan Venable


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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the most exciting tycoons of the industrial age, April 24, 2008
This review is from: Steel Titan : The Life of Charles M. Schwab (Paperback)
I first became aware of Charles Schwab when reading Andrew Carnegie's autobiography. Carnegie regarded Schwab as a prominent up and comer in industry for both his people skills as well as his work ethic; thus I knew he was someone I wanted to know more about. It is not often that a business book is difficult to put down, particularly one in the steel industry. Hessen delivers an emphatic success as Steel Titan kept me engrossed from start to finish.

Schwab earned recognition by putting together the conglomerate that produced US Steel, the largest steel corporation in history. By convincing Andrew Carnegie to sell his business interests and joining the original JP Morgan to finance the giant new company, Schwab displayed a shrewdness that elevated him to elite status among the kings of deal making.

Schwab became the first man on record to receive a million dollar annual salary in 1901 with US Steel, but left the company within two years due to the inefficiencies he saw being permitted. He purchased Bethlehem Steel, a near insignificant operation at the time, and built it into a giant of its own, second only to US Steel for many years.

Ironically, outside of the business world, Schwab's outlook on life could not have been further from the view of his original mentor, Andrew Carnegie. Schwab was a player, a partier, a high roller, and believed wholeheartedly that it was more morally just to spend frivolously than to give to charity; a thought based on the fact that he was giving back to the economy no matter how he spent his money, something hard to argue. As a result, Schwab, who at one time was worth millions and millions of dollars, spent himself into a near penniless stage dying without any money to his name.

Schwab lived a bold and adventurous life, compounded by all encompassing free spirit and cunning business acumen. If you enjoy the life of business tycoons and earnestly enjoy exploring the ups and downs of a hard lived life, Steel Titan will be of interest to you.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Well researched book on an underappreciated industrialist, October 17, 2007
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Pablo (Leesburg, VA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Steel Titan : The Life of Charles M. Schwab (Paperback)
Excellent book to read if you are interested in one of the lesser-remembered "Robber Barons," protege of Andrew Carnegie, and really an extraordinary person. Many of Schwab's business principles would serve executives well today. I enjoyed reading it.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Hope Kenneth Warren's bio is better, June 16, 2008
I read this book hoping for insight into the life of steel titan Charles Schwab equal to Wall's great biography of Schwab's benefactor, Andrew Carnegie. I found some interesting facts but not a lot of color. I wasn't quite sure whether there just wasn't that much genuinely interesting in his life, in addition to his being a successful corporate sort of guy, or whether things were being left out by the author, who is or was part of the Hoover institution at Stanford. I hope Kenneth Warren's life of Schwab (2007) has a richer story to tell.
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Steel Titan : The Life of Charles M. Schwab
Steel Titan : The Life of Charles M. Schwab by Robert Hessen (Paperback - 1990)
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