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Servant Leadership: A Journey into the Nature of Legitimate Power and Greatness 25th Anniversary Edition by Robert K. Greenleaf
$16.47
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The Constructivist Leader by Linda Lambert
$25.95
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Clear Leadership: How Outstanding Leaders Make Themselves Understood, Cut Through the Mush, and Help Everyone Get Real at Work by Gervase Bushe
$22.00
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Leadership Can Be Taught: A Bold Approach for a Complex World by Sharon Daloz Parks
$21.75
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Leadership on the Line: Staying Alive Through the Dangers of Leading by Martin Linsky
$21.75
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If Drath's idea seems sound to the point of dullness, that's perhaps because it has been, in some incarnation or another, the crux of every new book about leadership for the past 10 years: the age of the single, great lone leader has passed into a new age where dialogue, collaboration, and cross-perspectives are more important than ever. With its quasi-academic language, The Deep Blue Sea, doesn't really add to that lot, and moreover, it lacks the real-life examples from major companies that give so many books of this sort their kick. It's not a must-read, but for anyone determined to read absolutely whatever they can on the topic of 21st-century leadership, it certainly won't hurt--and the story about the daughter who inherits the reins of Zoffner Piano from her benevolent-ruler father and then has to reinvent the rules of leadership to keep the company alive is actually quite compelling in its quaint, family-business fashion. --Timothy Murphy
From Publishers Weekly
Drath, director of the Center for Creative Leadership, believes that today's competitive economy requires non-hierarchical leadership teams based on cooperation between managers and employees. He illustrates the point with a parable about a piano company's new president, who initially disregards but then listens to employees, wins their loyalty and finds that dramatic changes ensue. However, Drath's worthwhile but unorthodox message may prove difficult for traditional executives and employees. A $50,000-marketing budget and author tour will help sell the 40,000-copy first printing.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
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