Author: John (Page 2 of 19)

Mississippi Hill Country Blues 1967

In April 1973, a few months before I turned 23 years old, I went to the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival for the first time.  A highlight, of which there were many, was my baptism by the mystic rhythms of Napoleon Strickland and the Como Fife and Drum Corp. Othar and Bernice Turner on the snare drum and R. L. Boyce on the bass drum.  Boyce was a little man who banged the hell out his big drum resting on his stomach with his back flat on the stage floor.

Como Fife and Drum Corp Jazz Fest 1973 by Michael P. Smith

Como Fife and Drum Corp Jazz Fest 1973 by Michael P. Smith

msfredmcdowell

In 1967, George Mitchell, at the age of 23 years old, traveled from Minnesota to Como, Mississippi.  George stopped at Stuckeys for gas and asked his gas man, if he knew Fred McDowell.  The gas man replied, “Your looking at him”.  Como’s Stuckeys was owned by the father of Bubba O’Keefe, a blues hound and preservationist of the historic WROX radio station in Clarksdale. Bubba, his brother and I visited last weekend at the Sunflower River Blues and Gospel Festival where they told me many stories about Mississippi Fred McDowell.

Mississippi Fred was nice to George and introduced him to his other hill country pals: Othar Turner, R.L. Burnside, Johnny Woods, Joe Callicott, Napoleon Strickland, Jessie Mae Hemphill, Rosa Lee Hill and Ada Mae Anderson.  For two weeks, George photographed and interviewed this unique culture of music within the musicians homes.

ms hill country blues 2ms hill country blues 2ab

George’s photographs speak for themselves, but his book is not just another photography book.  His text is outstanding and compliments the photos in every way.  The reader feels as if these musicians are talking to you personally about their lives and music.  It’s powerful how insightful George was as a young man.  With his honorable reflections he captured the dignity of each individual.

gmrosa

As far as people who could be a life inspiration for someone, that would be Rosa Lee Hill.  She was as poor as they come.  There was nothing around her house.  No streets, just hills, in the middle of nowhere.  And there was next-to-nothing in her house.  That someone that poor could be that spirited and that full of life….I just liked her.  As a person, she was one of my favorite people. —George Mitchell

ms hill country bluesGeorge Mitchell will be signing North Mississippi Hill Country Blues 1967 (UPM, 2013) at LEMURIA on Wednesday, August 21, at 5:00 and reading at 5:30.

 George Mitchell will also be at the MISSISSIPPI MUSEUM OF ART on Tuesday, August 20. 

At 5:30 there will be a reception and cash bar; At 6:00 the program will begin; A book signing will follow. Click here for more info.

 

The Realm of Last Chances: A Novel

family menIn 1990, LSU published a collection of short stories by Steve Yarbrough entitled Family Men.  Lemuria decided to work on helping Steve find readers.  We had a signing to spread his writing voice and my friendship with Steve began around that time.

oxygen man first editionIt was nine years later when Lemuria had the pleasure of choosing Oxygen Man for First Editions Club. As Steve kept writing and publishing, his style became more natural, clear and succinct, and eventually Steve met an old friend of mine, Gary Fisketjon, who became his editor, opening the door to publishing opportunities.

mary ward brown steve yarbrough alistair macleodIn 2004, MPB’s Writers Series featured some of the great short story writers of our time: Alistair MacCleod, Mary Ward Brown and from Indianola, Mississippi, Steve Yarbrough.  The program became a landmark of this project.  All three writers read, talked and visited while sharing admiration for each other.

realm of last chancesIt’s now August 2013 and Lemuria has again chosen Steve’s new novel, The Realm of Last Chances, for this month’s First Edition Club.  I applaud Steve and his accomplishment.  Realm is subtle and bold.  Steve weaves relationships and character with a quiet tone around a thought provoking plot.  I believe Realm is Steve’s most ambitious and successful novel, however, I shy away from talking to much about my thoughts as to not interject too much influence.  The Realm of Last Chances is a personal experience for the reader to enjoy and decipher.

The Realm of Last Chances: A Novel by Steve Yarbrough, Alfred A. Knopf, August 2013.

Steve will be signing on Thursday, August 8 at 5:00.

A reading will follow at 5:30.

Bookstore Keys: Square Books–The No. 1 Bookstore in the U.S.

retail revivalI just finished Doug Stephens’ book The Retail Revival. This timely book is the most interesting business book I’ve read on the future of retail since The New Rules of Retail (see blog) a couple of years ago.

On surviving in the new age of consumerism, two statements Stephens makes in the first ten pages stand out:

1. Stephens lists brands that are under his “deathwatch” and his list includes Barnes and Noble. All of the brands on his list have one thing in common: “They each missed or ignored at least one universe-shaping shift in their market, and never quite recovered from it.” (xi)

2. “The bookstore channel has gone to great lengths in its attempt to convince us that deep down we all still love the smell and feel of paper books, when every available statistic suggests that we actually prefer the smell and feel of tablets and e-readers.” (xviii)

My reaction to these comments:

While at the very least B&N may appear to be backsliding, this bookstore chain is going through a re-branding process. And we don’t know the final result or what B&N will become. I’m not so sure B&N knows where they’re going either.

On the second statement, I simply disagree. I feel physical books are important to readers’ lives. Home libraries are what families are built around. I also feel that relationships with booksellers are meaningful associations within any community.

square booksWith all this being said, I’m getting to what this blog is really about.

I am proud of the announcement that Square Books as Publisher’s Weekly Bookstore of the Year in 2013. (see PW announcement here) My friends Lisa and Richard Howorth founded their bookstore in 1979. For over 30 years, they have made their community a better place to live. Their contributions have not just given Oxford something to be proud of but the whole state of Mississippi.

ann patchett at square books

Richard and Lisa do an exceptional job of demonstrating why real bookstores won’t go away. Their dedication of a lifetime of vitality through books and reading have changed their culture and will have positive effects on generations to come.

So as a fellow bookseller, I applaud their achievement with a standing ovation. I consider Square Books a shining example that contradicts Stephens’ earlier statement about real books. I feel now is the time for Real Book Store Revitalization. If book people are wishing they had the strength and willpower to build a bookstore in their community, now is a great time to do so.

richard howorth @ Neal Moore

As B&N expands its retailing brand into what–we do not know, now is the time for the Real Book Seller to emerge by forming Real Book Stores and selling real books. If this blog touches the inclination of any wanna-be bookseller, I suggest you travel to Square Books in Oxford and experience the pinnacle of what a bookstore can be and what bookselling can accomplish for its local environment.

Once again, congratulations to Lisa, Richard, Cody, Lynn and the Square Books gang on making a difference. Square Books is a Real Book Store.

Link to abbreviated online version of The Clarion Ledger article on Square Books

Bookstore Keys Series on Lemuria Blog

From 2013: A Message from Emily St. John Mandel from My Bookstore From 2011/2012: Reading One Click: Jeff Bezos and the Rise of amazon.com (March 19) Where will e-book sales level out? (June 2) Indie Bookstores Buying from Amazon? (June 1) BEA Roundup (May 19) Lemuria’s Headed for NYC (May17) Barnes & Noble Bankrupt? (April 28) Decluttering the Book Market: Ads on the latest Kindle (April 14) Independents on the Exposed End of the Titanic? (April 6th) Border’s Bonuses (March 30) The Experience of Holding a Book (March15) Finding “Deep Time” in a Bookstore (March 8th) Reading The New Rules of Retail by Lewis & Dart (March 3) The Future Price of the Physical Book (Feb 18) Borders Declares Bankruptcy (Feb 16) How Great Things Happen at Lemuria (Feb 8th) The Jackson Area Book Market (Jan 25) What’s in Store for Local Bookselling Markets? (Jan 18) Selling Books Is a People Business (Jan 14) A Shift in Southern Bookselling? (Jan 13) The Changing Book Industry (Jan 11)

Hunger Mountain: A Field Guide to Mind and Landscape

hunger mountainHunger Mountain: A Field Guide to Mind and Landscape

by David Hinton

(Shambhala, November 2012)

David Hinton is one of my favorite translators of Chinese poetry. I’ve enjoyed many of his works, of which Mountain Home stands out and might be my favorite. I was excited when I received his own Hunger Mountain, his account of a series of walks up and down a mountain near his Vermont home.

As David walks, he also weaves a human consciousness into his natural environment exploring the texture of his own experience. Transcendental moments open windows into ourselves. For us his reader, we can use his walk to explore our own internal culture. While walking with David, we address the textures and fundamentals of our own everyday experiences. Through his wisdom we begin to truly see more of who we are and better understand our cultural landscape.

The lessons (or chapters) are focused on real life issues. Chapter one “Sincerity” sets the tone of this transforming essay collection. We want to see our lives as clearly as possible, and David uses his many years of understanding the great Chinese masters to adapt nature as poetry as he translates his musings.

Hunger Mountain offers us a spiritual ecology of walking, using natural happenings to express how things arise and pass away, how our observances reappear transformed into other generating forms. Hunger Mountain is a walking meditation where we watch the process of forming our thoughts, as they come and go, moving us deeper into who we are.

I consider my experience reading Hunger as a personally transforming prose poem itself. For me, it is a book length poem, a meditation to help the reader find out more about their truest self. To read poetry this way is how I learned to enjoy reading poems. Using the hidden, the unsaid, to fill in the gaps helps me address dormant emotions. That is the diamond of joy that a real reading experience can bring.

If you want to explore you inner ecology, treat yourself to the pleasure of transforming yourself on Hunger Mountain.

*     *     *

 A mountain can be a great teacher–not only because it manifests the cosmology of sincerity and restless hunger with such immediacy and drama, but also because it stands apart, at once elusive  and magisterial. Walking up Hunger Mountain today, its imposing and indifferent presence reminds me yet again that things in and of themselves remain beyond us, even after the most exhaustive and accurate scientific or philosophical account , the most compelling mythology, or the most concise and penetrating poem.

-David Hinton

Peppermint Twist: The Mob, the Music, and the Most Famous Dance Club of the 60s

peppermint twist bookPeppermint Twist: The Mob, the Music, and the Most Famous Dance Club of the 60s

(St. Martin’s Press, November 2012)

by John Johnson, Jr. and Joel Selvin with Dick Cami

*     *     *

At a 1962 sixth-grade dance at the Riverside Park Clubhouse, I remember being 12 and trying to twist myself into being cool. I wasn’t alone. All my buddies and wanna-be girlfriends (the era of dog tags) were part of a national phenomenon, a craze that lit up all of America. The twist became a major catalyst to the sexual liberation of the ’60s.

peppermint-lounge-twisters

The twist taught all of white America to loosen up, to shake your bootie. For once the girls did not have to follow their partners. Roots were planted for the women’s movement and the sexual liberation to come. The twist became a land mark in American music.

The Peppermint Lounge In New York

Ground zero for the “Twist Atomic Bomb” was the Peppermint Lounge, the center of its universe. The Peppermint Twist Lounge laid the blueprint for future night clubs. It was the first famous rock-n-roll club. Twisting waitresses were the prototypes of the 60s Go-Go Girls, who in white boots, pony tails and skimpy attire, were suspended in cages over the dance floor moving in the flashing strobe lights.

peppermint lounge go go

Johnny Otis discovered Hank Ballard and his gang The Midnighters (famous for “Work with Me Annie . . . give me all my meat”). In 1958, Ballard took his twist to the King record studio using a Jimmy Reed shuffle feel, and birthed his tune. King Records decided that a young chicken plucker named Ernest Evans should record Hank’s song. That young singer, Ernest, who needed a star’s name, sang a great Fats Domino impression. So his name was changed to Chubby Checker. The rest is music history.

chubby checker twisting

Dick Clark dug the Twist and used his American Bandstand to fuel the fire of Chubby’s craze. “Just pretend you are wiping your bottom with a towel and putting a cigarette out with both feet.” His record zoomed to maximum popularity.

 

Joe Dee and The Starlighters became The Peppermint Twist lounge house band. They hit it big with the Peppermint Twist. The Starlighters packed-house-jive was fueled by the Peppermint Twisters which led to rail dancing and eventually to the Go-Go Girls at L.A.’s Whiskey A Go-Go.

peppermint lounge rail dancers

Driven by the success in New York City, Peppermint Lounge Miami was next. Dick Cami brought his amazing success formula to the heart of the Chitlin’ Circuit. Miami Lounge became stops for Sam and Dave, The Coasters and other black entertainers.

peppermint twist joey dee

Celebrities from JFK to the Beatles, Frank Sinatra toting along his rat pack, Capote, Lenny Bruce, and many more all wanted to have fun under the candy cane ceiling. It was the coolest scene in the country. To say the Peppermint Lounge was ground breaking barely touches the influence of  this landmark in American culture. The twist loosened up the 50s and especially us white folks.

Although the music itself is reason enough to read John Johnson’s Peppermint Twist, you’ll be fascinated by cultural, historical, and business escapades. The cultural phenomenon that rose out of The Peppermint Lounge was never meant to happen. The lounge was actually created to be a front for the mob, place to hide their wheeling and dealing. This part of the story is also told in detail and makes this era’s tale Godfatheresque.

I’ve shared a few tidbits of info I gathered from this fine book. Treat yourself to Dick’s story, pull out your 45s and enjoy twisting the night away.

chubby checker twistin usa

Mostly Ghosts

Bee Donely at Murrah High School

Bee Donley at Murrah High School

Join us Tuesday, April 16th at 5:00 for an event with Ms. Bee Donley in honor of her new poetry book Mostly Ghosts. The event will be held in our Dot Com building adjacent to Banner Hall.

This December, I was given a surprise from my 12th grade English teacher, Bee Donley. (She was also my daughter, Saramel’s, high school English teacher.) Bee had given me a copy of her book of poetry: Mostly Ghosts. A perfect gift since Christmas time is about sharing joy and reflecting on our shared memories.

I’ve slowly worked through her little book and have enjoyed reading of her past and of her inner self.

Mostly Ghosts is divided into three sections, titled: Ghosts, Delta Poems, and Through the Mists. The poems reflect Bee’s past as she shares memories of her father, WWII, and a young lady’s romantic memories.

“Women listen; men only think they do.

Maybe that’s not fair.

But only women hear an inflection

Go suddenly flat

Catch a turn of head that speaks disinterest

Sense a turning out, the murmured response.

 

And all good Southern girls know

To turn the conversation”

-from “Generally Speaking”

Bee (Ms. Donley) is one of the loveliest ladies I’ve ever known. Her wise beauty is so well reflected in her poetry.

Perhaps my favorite poem, “Quail Hunting with my Father,” reflects Bee’s core and her ability to relate to her high school students.

“my father got a cup of hot coffee

That he spooned Jack Daniels into.

We settled down as we watched

sparks from the fireplace

And always the unspoken words kept

my life together.”

In her poem, “Litany on an Eighty-fifth Birthday,” I believe Bee is at her best. Those who know her know she is an example of a well lived life:

“What happened to that girl, the dancer, the flirt,

the wife, the mother?

I don’ recognize this stranger.

What happened to all the yesterdays?

Get out the rose chiffon and let’s dance.”

bee3It’s odd how our paths cross; figuring out why is another story. Bee was kind to me, she passed me even though I was a terrible student, allowing me to graduate from high school. My 12th grade term paper on Ian Fleming’s James Bond, reflected my youthful love of reading mysteries. She gave me an “A” and I skated out of Murrah by a sliver. Little did we both know that in later years she would become a loyal follower of Lemuria. All these years our lives have stayed connected through reading. She is my teacher, and I her bookseller.

Bee is a dear friend and a fine poet. Let me conclude with the final lines of her poem, “Precedence”:

“I have no problem believing that

Dogs and trees and right paths go together”

bee

 

Get Thinner This Year

As people move into middle age, most of us get fatter. Since I was 30, I’ve felt that exercise was my path to good physical and mental health. Now over 30 years later, I’ve realized how important an early decision concerning this truth has been for me.

younger_next_year-656x1024Around 10 years ago I read Chris Crowley’s first book Younger Next Year. I quickly identified with his message and put some of his ideas into practice. Over time, I’ve added more of his suggestions and have been waiting for his next book, Thinner This Year.

Now, not only is Thinner This Year finally here, but Chris Crowley and Jen Sacheck are coming to Lemuria February 6th at 5 PM.

 

Chris Crowley

Thinner This Year is very much about the science of nutrition and the role nutrition plays with exercise in weight control and losing those extra pounds. Chris argues that exercise IS an elixir of youth and can reverse the aging process inside cells. As I’m growing older, I want to keep enjoying my lifestyle. Thanks to Chris and Jen, I’m better identifying what matters most to me. They challenge us to take aging into our own hands. By sharing their ideas in alternating chapters, the co-authors’ enthusiastic approach to a healthier lifestyle helps us stick to our diet and fitness regiments.

thinner

This book is NOT about extremes. It does not cast severe judgement, it just increases your health awareness and initiates you on the path to better health. Exercise leads to weight control which leads to better health; the healthier we are the more fun we can have. The choice is ours. We choose how we want to age, it’s our responsibility to our body and mind. A balance of our physical work with our conscious choices leads to proper aging. Proper aging is rewarded with a joyful attitude.

Since I’ve read Younger This Year and applied Chris’s ideas to my own lifestyle, I have been better off. As I said in my last blog, I’ve never met Chris, so I’m excited to hear him speak and to thank him for helping me make my time at 62 healthier.

However, I’ve been a little sluggish getting started with my diet and exercise in 2013. I’m selfishly hoping Chris and Jen will give me a swift kick in the pants to get me motivated. Please join us come out and join me this Wednesday at 5PM for an evening of fun conversation about health. You never know, maybe you might get a swift kick, too.

My Bookstore

my bookstore + beerMy Bookstore: Writers Celebrate Their Favorite Places to Browse, Read and Shop

Edited by Ronald Rice

Black Dog Books (2012)

Barry Moser’s reading of his essay about our bookstore was surely the highlight of Lemuria experience in 2012. Many old friends shared the evening toasting to bookselling. Barry’s reading of his heartfelt essay was sentimental and beautiful. I spent the last hundred days of 2012 reading this delightful book, drinking it in slowly, finishing the afterword on December 31st.

barry moser reading lemuria essay in my bookstoreEmily St. John Mandel’s concluding essay reconfirms the importance of bookselling as a service and an art form. Mandel’s concluding thoughts on consumer responsibility and spending your money and time are ways that you influence your community. Your choices should reflect your concern for the future of your town. Mandel ends with “if it happens that you’re someone who enjoys having a bookstore in your town, I would argue that it’s never been more important”

My Bookstore includes essays about stores I’ve visited and ones I’ve just heard about. I’ve discovered new stores offering new horizons for me to hopefully experience. I’ve been reinforced by Ron Rice’s collection that bookselling as an occupation of choice is alive and kicking as 2012 comes to an end.

Here are some of my favorite comments from other bookstore essays:

park road books

Park Road Books (Charlotte, NC) by Carrie Ryan:

“Independent bookstores like Park Road Books are so much more than a place to buy books. They’re a place for gathering, for sharing, for learning, for meeting new people. They are a home. There have been times I’ve been far away traveling and I’ve become homesick and walked into an independent bookstore because that’s something they all have in common: a feeling of coming home.”

talking leaves books

From Mike Cochrane’s essay, The self-stated goal of Talking Leaves Books (Buffalo, NY):

“. . . to make available life-changing books, books that ‘open us up to new worlds, or illuminate more clearly our own,’ books that ‘stretch and deepen our vision and our comprehension of the universe and its creatures, cultures and ways.'”

tattered cover bookstore

Stephen White’s essay about the great Tattered Covers Booksellers (Denver, CO):

“Intuition seemed to inform them when I was just looking, which was usually. But engage one of them on the floor with a question or a request for guidance and any staff member would talk books with you, patiently. Find books for you, eagerly. Ask what you liked, recently. Tell you about books they loved, passionately.”

carmichaels bookstore

I end this blog with comments from a great essay by Wendell Berry on books and bookselling from Carmichael’s Bookstore (Lousiville, KY):

“To me, it is not enough that a book is thought realized in language; it must also be the language further realized in print on paper pages bound between covers. It is a material artifact, a thing made not only to be seen but also to be held and smelled, containing language that can be touched, and underlined with an actual pencil, with margins that can actually be written on. And so a book, a real book, language incarnate, becomes a part of one’s bodily life. One’s bodily life, furthermore, is necessarily local and economic. And so to the life embodied in books must be added to the life of bookstores . . . It is a fair incarnation of the manifold life of books. To go there and find a book I didn’t expect or didn‘t expect to want, to decide I want it, to buy it as a treasure to take home, to conduct the whole transaction in a passage of friendly conversation–that is in every way a pleasure. A part of my economic life thus becomes a part of my social life. For that I need actual people in an actual place in the actual world.

Long live tangibility! Love live slow communication!

Lemuria, just off the electric George Saunders event, is planning a big 2013 year. This year influence our work efforts, get involved and let us influence your reading interest.

If you haven’t gotten a copy of My Bookstore we still have some signed by Barry Moser.

Real books signed by real authors in a real bookstore for real readers that care.

my bookstore crowd

Finally a piece on My Bookstore and memories of Mississippi bookstores by Jim PathFinder Ewing, our friend, journalist, author, writer, editor, and blogger living here in Jackson.

“I’m definitely browsing in My Bookstore — as well as all the bookstores I’ve known — and enjoying immensely the memories of them in the company of literary friends both found in the book as well as in my own recollections. At the current pace of reading, I’ll probably finish My Bookstore sometime in the next year, or two. But, you know what? I’m finding, it’s like being in a bookstore itself. Browsing is part of the experience.”

Read more of this lovely essay here. It’s a wonderful read.

Get off the couch! Chris Crowley & Dr. Jen Sacheck are coming to Lemuria!

A couple of years ago, as I turned 60-years-old, I wrote a blog about Chris Crowley’s Younger Next Year. I expressed how much I was affected by Chris’s lifestyle suggestions.

At 55, I had been jogging for 25 years, and my legs were nearing a running end. I didn’t want to give up that lifestyle, but that’s what I was facing. Chris’s younger book inspired me to find other exercise pleasures. I started more stretching and explored strength building. My biggest change was switching to stationary bike riding and not minding its boredom. I don’t watch television so getting into this exercise was a mental challenge. With enough diligence and practice, I’m now enjoying my jogging replacement. This pleasure has led to outside biking, enhanced by the convenience of the Ridgeland bike trails. My back and knees told me biking was my new path.

thinner this yearI’ve never met Chris or just been able to say thanks for sharing his helpful book about increasing your lifestyle pleasures. However, on February 6th, I will be able to thank him. After many requests to his publisher, Chris Crowley and Dr. Jen Sacheck will visit Jackson to discuss his new book Thinner This Year: A Diet and Exercise Program for Living Strong, Fit, and Sexy.

Chris Crowley and Jen SacheckI can’t share my excitement about Chris and Jen’s visit enough. If you haven’t found your Younger Next Year for men or Younger Next Year for Women, check them out. They might be good guides for your own lifestyle change.

Also, if your body is carrying a few extra pounds, consider Chris’s new book, Thinner This Year. Thinner is not really a diet book but a book for changing your lifestyle permanently. It will give you ideas on new ways to live happier and be more content with yourself as you age.

Chris Crowley and nutritionist Dr. Jen Sacheck will be signing and speaking at Lemuria at 5:00 & 5:30 on Wednesday, February 6th. Grab a friend or two and get ready for some no nonsense inspiration for better living! More details here.

The Commitment Engine by John Jantsch

The Commitment Engine by John Jantsch, Portfolio, October 2012.

“John’s book is insanely brave and breathtakingly important. Take the time to read it slowly.

-Seth Godin, author of Linchpin

Commitment determines the liveliness of your business. Commitment cannot be manufactured quickly. It’s not something you can talk about and bingo, it happens. Commitment must be cultivated carefully and nurtured. Commitment requires a clear understanding of your work. Understanding how commitment fits into your workplace culture and into your community determines your focus.

Real life marketing strategy is the core of what a business is. This is the way your community understands your brand. Marketing and customer service is the way your patrons receive what you offer through the effects of your work.

Jantsch’s fine book is divided into three parts:

1. The Path: Clarity

2. The Patron: Culture

3. The Promise: Community

I enjoyed Commitment Engine. While reading I reflected on Lemuria’s path. In doing so, I have become more conscious of our desired future path, a journey to be carved by Lemuria’s hard work and our customer service. We know that the only way for our customers to feel our commitment is to be fully alive in it ourselves.

Lemuria wants to engage you, our community, and help you be a part of our story. Our outreach team, Maggie, Emily and Lisa, make up our effort to go off site wherever you are. Another way we share is through our Remembering Miss Welty blog series. By sharing your story or just reading other stories, you can show our community how much Miss Welty still means to us. For 37 years, I feel like our customers have been part of our Lemuria story. However, we hope we can strengthen our relationship with our community. A total customer experience is our bookstore goal.

In conclusion, Commitment Engine helps you to review your work relationship with purpose and to readdress the meaningful ways your brand and your stories work within your community. Interwoven with clear authentic marketing and a complete brand commitment, reading Jantsch can help you define your real life strategy.

If you are interested in addressing your work commitment individually or as a business, read this book. Commitment Engine can help you understand how to challenge yourself.

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