Authors Listed:
John
Elkington and Pamela Hartigan
Joseph
H. Ellis Jeffrey
Fox
Nance
Guilmartin
Stuart
Lucas
Lynn
Peril Barbara
Stoker
John
Strelecky
John
Elkington and Pamela Hartigan
THE
POWER OF UNREASONABLE PEOPLE
Featured on the
New York Times
Read
article here. The Age of Ambition
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
Published: January 27, 2008
DAVOS, Switzerland
Fred R. Conrad/The New
York Times
Nicholas D. Kristof.
With the American presidential
campaign in full swing, the obvious way to change the world might
seem to be through politics.
But growing numbers of young people
are leaping into the fray and doing the job themselves. These are
the social entrepreneurs, the 21st-century answer to the student
protesters of the 1960s, and they are some of the most interesting
people here at the World Economic Forum (not only because they’re
half the age of everyone else).
Andrew Klaber, a 26-year-old playing
hooky from Harvard Business School to come here (don’t tell
his professors!), is an example of the social entrepreneur. He spent
the summer after his sophomore year in college in Thailand and was
aghast to see teenage girls being forced into prostitution after
their parents had died of AIDS.
So he started Orphans Against AIDS
(www.orphansagainstaids.org), which pays school-related expenses
for hundreds of children who have been orphaned or otherwise affected
by AIDS in poor countries. He and his friends volunteer their time
and pay administrative costs out of their own pockets so that every
penny goes to the children.
Mr. Klaber was able to expand the
nonprofit organization in Africa through introductions made by Jennifer
Staple, who was a year ahead of him when they were in college. When
she was a sophomore, Ms. Staple founded an organization in her dorm
room to collect old reading glasses in the United States and ship
them to poor countries. That group, Unite for Sight, has ballooned,
and last year it provided eye care to 200,000 people (www.uniteforsight.org).
In the ’60s, perhaps the most
remarkable Americans were the civil rights workers and antiwar protesters
who started movements that transformed the country. In the 1980s,
the most fascinating people were entrepreneurs like Steve Jobs and
Bill Gates, who started companies and ended up revolutionizing the
way we use technology.
Today the most remarkable young people
are the social entrepreneurs, those who see a problem in society
and roll up their sleeves to address it in new ways. Bill Drayton,
the chief executive of an organization called Ashoka that supports
social entrepreneurs, likes to say that such people neither hand
out fish nor teach people to fish; their aim is to revolutionize
the fishing industry. If that sounds insanely ambitious, it is.
John Elkington and Pamela Hartigan title their new book on social
entrepreneurs “The Power of Unreasonable People.”
Universities are now offering classes
in social entrepreneurship, and there are a growing number of role
models. Wendy Kopp turned her thesis at Princeton into Teach for
America and has had far more impact on schools than the average
secretary of education.
One of the social entrepreneurs here
is Soraya Salti, a 37-year-old Jordanian woman who is trying to
transform the Arab world by teaching entrepreneurship in schools.
Her organization, Injaz, is now training 100,000 Arab students each
year to find a market niche, construct a business plan and then
launch and nurture a business.
The program (www.injaz.org.jo) has
spread to 12 Arab countries and is aiming to teach one million students
a year. Ms. Salti argues that entrepreneurs can stimulate the economy,
give young people a purpose and revitalize the Arab world. Girls
in particular have flourished in the program, which has had excellent
reviews and is getting support from the U.S. Agency for International
Development. My hunch is that Ms. Salti will contribute more to
stability and peace in the Middle East than any number of tanks
in Iraq, U.N. resolutions or summit meetings.
“If you can capture the youth
and change the way they think, then you can change the future,”
she said.
Another young person on a mission
is Ariel Zylbersztejn, a 27-year-old Mexican who founded and runs
a company called Cinepop, which projects movies onto inflatable
screens and shows them free in public parks. Mr. Zylbersztejn realized
that 90 percent of Mexicans can’t afford to go to movies,
so he started his own business model: He sells sponsorships to companies
to advertise to the thousands of viewers who come to watch the free
entertainment.
Mr. Zylbersztejn works with microcredit
agencies and social welfare groups to engage the families that come
to his movies and help them start businesses or try other strategies
to overcome poverty. Cinepop is only three years old, but already
250,000 people a year watch movies on his screens — and his
goal is to take the model to Brazil, India, China and other countries.
So as we follow the presidential
campaign, let’s not forget that the winner isn’t the
only one who will shape the world. Only one person can become president
of the United States, but there’s no limit to the number of
social entrepreneurs who can make this planet a better place.
***
Featured in The
Economist
Read
article here.
Unreasonable People Power
Jan 22nd 2008
From Economist.com
The growing influence of social entrepreneurs
TEN years ago, few people had heard
the term “social entrepreneur”. Now, to be a social
entrepreneur is to be sought after by politicians and businessmen
alike for your potential to solve big social challenges in innovative
ways. Governments, increasingly struggling to meet society’s
demands, are desperate for help from someone more creative than
the typical bureaucrat.
Businesses, as this week’s special
report in The Economist makes clear (see article), want to engage
in socially responsible but still entrepreneurial schemes that let
them “do well by doing good”. Social entrepreneurs now
have a reputation for being able to deliver, especially since the
grand-daddy of social entrepreneurship, Muhammad Yunus, was awarded
the Nobel Peace Prize a couple of years ago for founding Grameen
Bank, a micro-finance powerhouse.
This week, some of the
world’s leading social entrepreneurs have gathered near Zurich
for the final annual summit organised by the Schwab Foundation for
Social Entrepreneurship. Klaus Schwab, the legendary founder of
the World Economic Forum, which meets later this week in Davos,
convened the first summit a few years ago, but now apparently feels
that social entrepreneurs are sufficiently mainstream that the event
has served its purpose. They are an extraordinarily diverse bunch—so
much so that it is not at all obvious what it means to be a social
entrepreneur.
One session brought together a French
woman who runs a company that provides childcare to parents with
unusual working hours, a Czech woman who set up a helpline for victims
of domestic violence and then campaigned to change the law so that
perpetrators rather than victims have to leave the family home,
a Chilean founder of an organisation that provides coaching for
at-risk families, and a Mexican who has built a for-profit company
that provides free movies to poor people on inflatable screens,
funded by advertisements from big companies.
Each of them was entrepreneurial,
certainly, but quite what “social” means is less clear.
The Czech organisation, Bily Kruh Bezpeci, founded by Petra Vitousova,
is never going to turn a profit, nor should it try to do so. Ariel
Zylbersztejn, the managing director of Mexico’s Cinepop, by
contrast, boasts that his entertainment-based platform allows business
and government to target otherwise inaccessible markets. He has
ambitious plans to expand, not least to China. His brand of social
entrepreneurship could make him rich.
Still, both he and Ms Vitousova are
doing interesting things, and they seemed to find inspiration from
each other. Perhaps it does not really matter exactly how “social
entrepreneur” is defined if such impressive people feel good
and part of a supportive community when they use the term to describe
themselves.
Pamela Hartigan, who runs the Schwab
Foundation, seems to think what all these social entrepreneurs have
in common is that they are “unreasonable people”. She
means this as a compliment. Indeed, she has just written a fascinating
book, with John Elkington, the founder of Sustainability, a consultancy,
celebrating “The Power of Unreasonable People: How Social
Entrepreneurs Create Markets and Change the World.” The title
is inspired by playwright George Bernard Shaw, who once said, “The
reasonable man adapts himself to the world, the unreasonable one
persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all
progress depends on the unreasonable man.”
The gist of the book is that established
businesses should carefully watch—and be ready to invest in—various
forms of social entrepreneurship, which tend to be good at spotting
profitable opportunities in unlikely places, not least amongst poorer
consumers at the so-called “bottom of the pyramid”.
Mr Yunus has showed that even the poorest borrowers can be good
customers, and as a result huge amounts of profit-seeking capital
have flowed into the microfinance industry all over the world. Ms
Hartigan and Mr Elkington reckon that social entrepreneurs will
uncover other profitable new industries.
As well as courting business, social
entrepreneurs are also increasingly looking to expand into partnerships
with governments. Indeed, the strongest theme uniting the social
entrepreneurs in Zurich (besides their unreasonableness) is the
realisation that they need to work with government or business,
or both, if they are to succeed on the large scale to which they
aspire.
In the early days, social entrepreneurs
saw themselves as an alternative to business or government. Today,
they want to be partners, seeing business and government as assets
to be leveraged. This is probably a good thing, provided it does
not dull their creativity or cause them to be more reasonable.
In some ways, social entrepreneurship
has reached a crossroads. As it has become better known, expectations
have been raised; the next few years will show whether these expectations
are justified and these social entrepreneurs can deliver. This will
depend on them mastering the nitty-gritty of managing a growing
organisation, including everything from a proper budgeting process
and human-resource policies to succession planning and corporate
governance.
Unreasonable people are not always
gifted at such mundane tasks. Moreover, the community of social
entrepreneurs gathered in Zurich is tight, built on long-standing
personal connections that allow them to solve problems and find
resources in unorthodox ways. To go mainstream will require adapting
to a more open and perhaps more impersonal environment.
Yet, if the next phase
in the evolution of the social entrepreneur goes well, both business
and government will be significantly improved, not least in the
poorer and less well-run parts of the world. Perhaps, eventually,
it will be impossible to be regarded as an effective politician
or social activist if you are not also entrepreneurial, or a successful
entrepreneur if you do not address social needs. In that case, the
term social entrepreneur, whatever it means, will no longer be necessary—but
its disappearance from the dictionary will symbolise its triumph.
Is that such an unreasonable thing to hope for?
***
Featured in The
Financial Times
Read
article here.
Changing the market system
By John Willman, Business Editor
Thursday Jan 24 2008 15:10
The Power of Unreasonable People: How Social Entrepreneurs Create
Markets that Change the World GameBy John Elkington and Pamela HartiganHarvard
Business School Press, $27.50, £15.99
The advancement of the human race
depends on unreasonable people, the playwright George Bernard Shaw
said in his Maxims for Revolutionists at the end of Man and Superman:
"The reasonable man adapts himself to the world: the unreasonable
one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore
all progress depends on the unreasonable man."
Entrepreneurs have often been seen
by their contemporaries as unreasonable. Think of Henry Ford, paying
workers twice the going rate to mass produce identical black cars
by the million. Or the pioneers behind low-cost airlines such as
Southwest Airlines and Ryanair who launched discount flights with
none of the frills offered by traditional carriers. Or Sir James
Dyson, inventor of the bagless vacuum cleaner, who had to create
his own company to make it.
John Elkington, founder of UK-based think-tank SustainAbility,
and Pamela Hartigan of the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship,
argue that humankind's future now depends on one particular new group
of unreasonable people. They are the social entrepreneurs striving
to solve the knotty economic, social and environmental problems facing
the modern world.
These pioneers are "disrupting existing
industries, value chains and business models" to find solutions
to poverty and hunger, the threat of global pandemics and climate
change. More important for Financial Times readers, their skills
must be harnessed by conventional businesses if they are to adapt
to the risks and opportunities that now face the world.
This is not often easy, precisely
because such people are, well, unreasonable. They are usually impatient
with bureaucracies and prepared to take big risks to tackle seemingly
intractable problems. Their goals of sustainable development and
social justice appear to challenge existing ways of doing business.
Their solutions are often small-scale, tailor-made and dependent
on informal networks alien to the modern corporation.
Yet the most successful, identified
in this book, have changed for the better the lives of hundreds
of thousands or even millions of people.
One of the best-known is Muhammed
Yunus, the Nobel prize-winning founder of Grameen Bank, which pioneered
microfinance and inspired imitators around the world. He has now
created new businesses, such as Grameenphone, which built the largest
cellular network in Bangladesh with the Village Phone Program to
provide access to telecommunications in the countryside.
Victoria Hale's OneWorld Health develops
new drugs for diseases that affect the world's poorest people, such
as leishmaniasis. David Green's Aurolab has become one of the
largest manufacturers of eye lenses used to deal with cataracts,
selling for less than $4 lenses that would cost $150 in developed
countries. Nicholas Negroponte of Massachusetts Institute of Technology
is behind a $100 laptop that would be affordable for the poorest
young people on the globe.
Many big companies have already grasped
the environmental and social challenge. Large banks such as HSBC,
Goldman Sachs and Citigroup are among those working to reduce their
carbon footprints and finance new technologies to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions. Retailers such as Wal-Mart of the US and the UK's
Marks & Spencer are working with suppliers to ensure products
are made ethically and with less environmental impact.
But few have so far addressed the
greatest opportunities that lie among the 4bn people who live on
less than $2 a day - the so-called "base of the pyramid".
Their purchasing power is $5,000bn a year according to the International
Finance Corporation, the private sector arm of the World Bank. And
there is money to be made in meeting their needs - something the
most successful social entrepreneurs emphasise in seeking resources
to scale up operations.
The aim of this book is to help conventional
businesses work with those entrepreneurs and to learn from the way
they work.
The authors are notable in seeing
no clash between the ends social entrepreneurs are seeking to achieve
and the market system.
As a book, it is far from satisfactory.
Written in the leaden style of many US business magazines, it cries
out for more colourful accounts of the heroes it writes about and
how they overcame obstacles. It also mixes true entrepreneurs such
as those above with campaigners such as Peter Eigen of Transparency
International and Bob Massie, who launched the Global Reporting
Initiative. The latter have made an impact through their ingenuity
and single-mindedness, but can hardly be described as entrepreneurs.
Yet there is no doubting the validity
of the message. An increasingly crowded world is full of danger
and challenges. The market system can solve those problems far more
effectively than government action - provided the businesses that
operate within it learn from these unreasonable people.
Joseph
H. Ellis AHEAD
OF THE CURVE
Recently Featured
on NPR:
Listen
to the story here
Do you want to predict the
stock market? What number should you care about? Unemployment rate?
Consumer Confidence? On this week's Money Matters -- our regular
look at how to improve your bottom line -- author Joseph Ellis talks
about the market's...
Featured on Investor's
Insight:
Read
the article here
The
economy grew at a much slower pace last quarter, with GDP only moving
forward by 1.1%. This week we look at why and see if we can mine
the consumer spending data to give us clues about future growth.
We are going to start a two part series inspired by a remarkable
new book I am reading called "Ahead of the Curve," sub-titled
"A Commonsense Guide to Forecasting Business and Market Cycles."
Joe Ellis was a partner at Goldman
Sachs and was ranked as Wall Street's #1 retail analyst for 18 consecutive
years by Institutional Investor. I caught up with Joe last time I
was in New York as he explained his prediction process. I think there
is real value here, and I suggest serious investors get a copy. Even
though it was published by Harvard Business School Press, it is a
very readable book....
Jeffrey
Fox
HOW
TO BECOME CEO
HOW TO BECOME A RAINMAKER
DON'T SEND A RESUME
HOW TO BECOME A GREAT BOSS
HOW TO BECOME A MARKETING
SUPERSTAR HOW
TO MAKE BIG MONEY IN YOUR OWN SMALL BUSINESS
SECRETS
OF GREAT RAINMAKERS
Featured
in Booklist
How to Become a Rainmaker
This
is an afternoon read, pure and simple. And chances are good that
once readers accept Fox's hard-hitting yet commonsense approaches,
they'll accept his sales process, which applies, by the way, to
selling widgets, promoting intangible services, or selling yourself.
Every one of the author's 50 two-page to four-page chapters contains
just one nugget of information more than the preceding section,
enough to keep the momentum and the attention. A sad story about
the hazards of drinking coffee (it spilled--and the prospect was
then distracted by a second crisis) is followed by a notice not
to eat a major meal during a sales lunch, which is promptly followed
by "no pen in the shirt pocket" advice. Fox's seemingly disparate
hints and tips, in short, comprise a very logical and memorable
way of rainmaking, and a short tome that will show anyone the how-tos.
Barbara Jacobs
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Nance
Guilmartin HEALING
CONVERSATIONS: WHAT TO SAY WHEN YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT TO SAY
Washington
Post
Stuart Lucas
WEALTH:
GROW IT, PROTECT IT, SPEND IT, AND SHARE IT
Recently Featured
in Publisher's Weekly:
See
the review here
Wealth: those who have it
want to keep it, but what's the best way to ensure it doesn't run
dry- Lucas is ideally suited to answer the question. A Harvard Business
School graduate who's worked at wealth management firms, and a fourth-generation
heir of E.A. Stuart, the founder of the Carnation Company, Lucas
counsels readers who have, or are planning to have, at least a few
hundred thousand dollars in the bank. His book teaches them to manage
their wealth so it grows, or is at least maintained, for as long
as they want, whether that's one lifetime or several generations.
Lucas focuses principally on investing decisions, spending decisions
(like whether to engage in philanthropy) and emotional issues. He
provides a good balance of in-depth financial guidance and tips
on negotiating financial decisions in the family. Though the subject
is dry, Lucas keeps the book interesting by using examples taken
from his own family's experience with fortune, a tactic that lends
both credibility and intimacy to his advice. With its frequent plunges
into the minutiae of investment options, this book is definitely
not light reading. It is, however, a helpful guidebook for those
faced with the task of growing, protecting, spending and sharing
a large amount of cash.(Mar.)
Lynn
Peril
COLLEGE
GIRLS:
Bluestockings,
Sex Kittens, and Co- Eds, Then and Now
Featured in Publisher's
Weekly:
Will
her B.A. ruin her chances for an M-r-s.? Will too much study endanger
her procreative organs? And if higher education is truly safe for
a young woman, what sort of curriculum is appropriate? Greek and
Latin? Home economics? According to Peril (Pink Think), in this
history of women in colleges, ever since the first young ladies
went off to their "dame schools" in early America , people
have been debating such questions. Underlying these mentionable
fears was one more worrisome: who would protect a girl's virtue
when she lived away from home, surrounded by hormonal young men?
As Peril makes clear, throughout history "[a]dults inevitably
get their granny-sized panties in a bunch when it comes to the sexcapades
of the younger generation." True, she's focused on prescriptive
material more than the actual experiences of co-eds in various eras,
but it's eye-opening to see how consistently advice-givers and advertisers
have played on the same few anxieties regarding the female student.
The material that Peril has included on student experiences—particularly
the stories of women at historically black colleges—helps balance
the text. Peril's witty, irreverent style, her generous use of old
advertisements and photos and her careful footnotes make this text
unusually user-friendly. (Aug.)
COLLEGE
GIRLS:
Bluestockings,
Sex Kittens, and Co- Eds, Then and Now
Featured in Book
List:

Barbara
Stoker A
WOMAN WITH A MINUTE
POSITIVE
RISK
The
Sunday Denver Post

John
Strelecky
THE
WHY CAFE
Featured in Publisher's
Weekly :
View
the article here
April 17, 2006
The
Why Café
John P. Strelecky.
Da Capo, $12.95 (130p) ISBN
0-7382-1063-3
The questions surrounding the purpose
of life have been pondered for thousands of years. Strelecky, an
M.B.A. and inspirational speaker, gives some of these questions
a fresh turn and brings the reader on a quick journey into self-exploration.
Through a fictional account, he tells the story of John, who sets
out on a vacation to escape from his unfulfilling life. But after
a forced detour, he finds himself lost and his car very low on gas
as darkness falls. Beginning to despair, John sees the lights of
the Why Café in the near distance and heads in that direction. Despite
its appearance, this isn't your typical cafe; it's one where the
menu poses questions like "Why are you here?" Before long, John
is facing up to what he needs to do to find his way to the life
he really wants. This is a simple read but asks
profound questions about the purpose of life and our role as individuals.
While it often seems that John is overly obtuse, his questioning
helps to draw the story out and offers a richer picture of the options
available to anyone looking for more meaning in life. (June 1)
Featured in Florida
Today:
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the article here
Note: This article was
picked up by Gannett Newspapers and has been widely circulated.
April 19, 2006
Help
yourself to philosophical self-help book
'Little
book' tackles the big question: Why am I here?
BY
CATHY MATHIAS
FOR
FLORIDA TODAY
Have
you ever wondered why you exist? It's one of those basic philosophical
questions that hit us hard at certain times in our lives. Does my
life have any meaning? What am I doing here? What's my reason for
getting up in the morning? Religious groups, psychoanalysts and
plenty of bartenders have tried to fill in the blanks for us. But
the answer lies within each of us. Some of us find it, some never
do.
To
help in that search, Orlando resident John Strelecky has written
a little guidebook. He's not a psychologist. He's not a religious
guru. He's just another guy seeking answers to the same hard questions,
and maybe he has put his finger on the pulse of the world. In 2002,
after 20 years in the business world, Strelecky and his wife found
themselves out of work and decided to go backpacking around the
world. After 70,000 miles and many unforgettable experiences, Strelecky
came home and wrote this book.
He
self-published it as a little paperback in November 2003 under the
title, "The Why Are You Here Café." The book jacket showed
a little green sea turtle ordering from a menu in a diner, which
related to a story within the book. Strelecky began handing out
copies and promoting his book while doing some speaking engagements.
When people read the book, it struck a chord and began to take off.
A mother bought three for her grown children; a counselor ordered
100 for her clients; a manager bought 500 for his employees.
Without
a million-dollar publicity campaign, this little book, which only
inspires us to ask ourselves three questions, has spread around
the world in the past year via the best advertising machine that
exists: word-of-mouth. That grassroots promotion has propelled this
little book into the ranks of one of the fastest-selling self-published
books on the market.
Last
year, New York publisher Perseus Books bought the rights to "The
Why Are You Here Café" and began selling the translation rights
to publishers around the world in anticipation of the hardcover
release.
Perseus
is just now re-printing it under their DaCapo imprint as "The
Why Café." On the book jacket, the hungry green sea turtle
has been replaced by an enticing white cup of café latte. The improvements
wrought by a professional publishing firm are clear: a shorter and
easier-to-remember title plus a book cover image that appeals to
the coffee-lover in many of us.
"You
know, we're all searching for our purpose in life, and I could see
where this book would help a student whose graduating with those
personal questions about what path to take next," said Dr.
Larry Holt, professor and coordinator of the doctoral program at
the University of Central Florida .
"The
Why Café" is poised to explode in the next few months as the
"next big thing." This unassuming guy from Orlando , who
never aspired to literary fame, shakes his head in disbelief.
"I
can't believe how well it's done," Strelecky said. "We
really couldn't believe it when we heard that sales (of the paperback)
were really taking off in Antarctica . Who knew it would sell in
Antarctica ?"
The
promotion for the hardcover release is being handled by a local
publicity firm, Spicer Consulting Group of Orlando . Deb Spicer,
a former Cocoa Beach resident and long-time marketing professional,
received the review copies from the publisher this past week.
"DaCapo
Press just sent me two, that's it," Spicer said. "So I
sent one over to FLORIDA TODAY and kept one here in the office.
We're only just now beginning our worldwide publicity on this. We're
planning to send one to Oprah. We think this is something she might
be interested in because she is doing that series on finding out
what you're meant to do in life. This seems to fit in with that."
The story is the narrator is telling how he got lost and wandered
into "The Why Café" out in the middle of nowhere. As he
ate, he discussed with the waitress and cook the strange questions
on the back of the menu: "Why are you here? Do you fear death?
Are you fulfilled?" Although the narrative is rather stilted
compared to a literary novel, the message definitely gets through.
"I
like to read self-help books, but some of them make it too hard
to understand, but this book wouldn't turn anyone off. It's easy
for a regular person to relate to," said Diane Senkowski, an
immigration attorney in Cocoa Beach . "Once people read it
they start talking the lingo, like the PFE in this one. That's a
sign that the book will touch someone's life."
Strelecky
said we all need to discover our PFE -- purpose for existence. No
matter what activity you do in life, you should give your all. With
millions in sales, and requests for his professional speaking engagements
at an all-time high, it appears Strelecky has found his own PFE.
"We just got a call yesterday from someone asking if the movie
rights to this book were still available for purchase. Wow!"
Strelecky said.
Featured at Yahoo,
Seattle Times, and more
View
article here.
The
Next Alchemist? Time or Perhaps Madonna Will Tell ...
Monday June 26, 8:19 am ET
ORLANDO, Fla., June 26
/PRNewswire/ -- He may not have Dan Brown and The Da Vinci Code's
top spot on the bestseller lists yet, but perhaps an endorsement
from Madonna is in his future. First time author John P. Strelecky,
an unknown in the literary world, just signed a major deal with
RBA Libros for the worldwide Spanish translation rights to his inspirational
book, The Why Cafe (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0738210633).
This as the title made its first international bestseller list and
went for its second printing in the U.S. only 30 days after its
release.
According to RBA Editor
Marta Sevilla Sanchez, "This book is The Alchemist for the
21st Century, a little jewel that will change the life of millions
of people." The Alchemist, Brazilian author Paulo Coelho's
international best seller, sold millions of copies after its release
in 1988, and drew a wide fan base including celebrities such as
music icon Madonna and actress Julia Roberts.
RBA Libros, located in Barcelona,
Spain, has rushed their version into production for an October release
as a lead-in for the Christmas Holidays.
This is the fourteenth
translation deal for Strelecky's book. It will now be sold in over
forty countries around the world in 2006, and the first time author's
star seems to be rising quickly. "It's been interesting,"
he says laughing, when asked how he is handling his newfound fame.
"In the last few
weeks we've had an inquiry about the availability of the movie rights,
People Magazine asking for photos, and publishers booking my travel
for a European media tour. I no longer wait for people to say -
'You might want to sit down for this.' Now when the phone rings,
I just sit down."
According to Doris S.
Michaels, the New York literary agent who discovered the book and
brokered the deal, "There are hundreds of thousands of manuscripts
submitted every year and every once in a while you get that rare
one you just know is something special. When publishers themselves
are having personal experiences with a book, you know it's a winner,
and that has certainly been the case with The Why Cafe."
Strelecky's book, which
had a June publication date in the U.S., has already hit #5 on the
bestseller list of the Straits Times, Singapore's most read Daily
Newspaper. Singapore is one of the first countries where the book
was released. It debuted there under the title The Why Are You Here
Cafe, and according to Strelecky, the interview requests have already
been coming in. "I just did an interview for Bride magazine
and we're trying to coordinate three more phone interviews."
Not a bad life for a guy
whose inspiration for the book came when he left his corporate job
and spent nine months with his wife backpacking around the world
on $40 per day. With publishers booking a European media tour, and
his recent bestseller status, it looks like Strelecky's days as
"an
unknown" are over. Now all he needs is the endorsement from
Madonna.
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"The Why Café
is a fast read that will definitely leave you thinking. Strelecky’s
style reminds me of Richard Bach (you know, the guy who wrote that
book about the feisty, eccentric seagull that caught hell from his
friends because he was flying too high?)
Our narrator stumbles upon a diner in the middle of nowhere. Once
inside, he's befriended by the staff, a bunch of friendly psychic
life coaches. While enjoying a breakfast fit for an army of lumberjacks,
John is encouraged to ponder three questions he finds written on
the back of the menu: “Why are you here?” “Do you fear death?” and
“Are you fulfilled?”
Because I ask myself these exact same questions all the time, I
already had my own set of answers. Unfortunately, I was a bit off
the mark. Essentially, this book is about finding a Life Purpose.
Though the setting is
simple, the characters are extraordinary. The entire book is very
engaging—and the lumberjack breakfast is a sensual delight.
The Why Café is an insightful, inspiring read that offers
a lot of excellent (though not always practical) advice. The message
here is one that I could never argue with: do what makes you happy.
Now if only I could make a living building sandcastles.:
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