Imagen del autor

Michael Gates Gill

Autor de Cómo Starbucks me salvó la vida

4 Obras 1,160 Miembros 83 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Créditos de la imagen: Michael Gates Gill

Obras de Michael Gates Gill

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1940
Género
male
Nacionalidad
USA
Educación
Yale University
Ocupaciones
advertising executive
barista
Relaciones
Gill, Brendan (father)
Gill, Charles (brother)
Gill, Elizabeth (daughter)
Organizaciones
J. Walter Thompson
Starbucks
Biografía breve
Michael Gates Gill grew up in a wealthy family in New York City. After dropping out of Yale University, he became a successful advertising executive at the J. Walter Thompson advertising agency. He ultimately lost his job at the age 63 and was diagnosed with a brain tumor shortly thereafter. With no job prospects, he reluctantly took a job at the coffee chain Starbucks and wrote a book about his experiences. The result How Starbucks Saved My Life was a hit and the film rights have been optioned by Tom Hanks.

Miembros

Reseñas

*Disclaimer* This is a full summary of the book from beginning to end.

This book is very heartwarming. Michael Gates Gill was a creative director at J. Walter Thompson Advertising when he was fired from his job, due to budget cuts. He ended up taking a Starbucks job at entry level. The only annoying thing about the book was that this older gentlemen was so "old school" and so prejudiced from the time era in which he was raised, that his first encounters with African-Americans were such huge experiences for him. But, to his credit, he learned from his mistakes (his former arrogance, rudeness on not taking African-American employees seriously, realizing that people could not be judged solely based on their apparel and music when not working at the store, etc...) The book did not center around this, or the book would have been more offensive to me. The book talked about the joy of learning how to work at Starbucks each step of the way, from cleaning toilets, to being a barista, to running a cash register. And, Michael was also overcoming a brain tumor that he did not want removed any time soon, and was much older and slower than the rest of the employees, due to physical restraints. But, what he didn't have in speed, he sure excelled in enthusiasm and trying to make his work environment a better place. He was so loyal to the first store where first hired (1 1/2 hrs away, only job opening at the time), that the supervisor had to nudge him to finally transferring back closer to home to save him money and energy that he really needed. After reading this book, I really wanted to work at Starbucks, and I am a certified teacher. It teaches humbleness, and that people are to be respected even if they don't have college degrees and aren't carrying suitcases. Plus, the perk of sampling free Starbucks items is MIGHTY enticing!… (más)
 
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doehlberg63 | 77 reseñas más. | Dec 2, 2023 |
Completely typical. Privileged man loses it all and learns much by working in the service industry. Somehow, I never felt that way after 15 years in the service industry. Maybe I just spent too long dealing with some of the worst people ever. Or maybe I just had a bad attitude.
 
Denunciada
WellReadSoutherner | 77 reseñas más. | Apr 6, 2022 |

A workaholic "Masters of the Universe" account executive falls from grace. Fired from his job in advertising and also recently divorced after an affair, he finds himself applying for a job at Starbucks. There, as the book title puts it, Starbucks saves his life.

I make it a point to avoid Starbucks (one might consider me a snob of Starbucks) and the book probably did better to warm me up to Starbucks than the author himself. The guy is funny. But sometimes, I was put off by him squeezing his past experiences for example with Ernest Hemingway, James Thurber, and 50 cent. It did show how far from grace he fell but it's hard to really feel sorry for someone who flew so high.

Still, it's a sweet little read for and an inspiration for anyone who feels like they hit rock bottom in their life.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
wellington299 | 77 reseñas más. | Feb 19, 2022 |
[This was also published at my website, the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography.]

So let's make no mistake, the only reason Michael Gill's 2007 memoir How Starbucks Saved My Life is even readable in the first place at all is that he is so relentlessly hard on himself throughout; the very definition of a white upper-class corporate-executive douchebag, he plainly admits here that he was essentially a human monster for reacting to getting laid off in his fifties from his cushy ad-agency job (one he got in the early '60s literally because drinking buddies at Yale pulled some strings for him) by having an affair behind his wife's back, accidentally getting his mistress pregnant, then determining that he's going to "do right" by the child, despite having a 100-percent track record of fucking up the relationships with the three existing grown children he already has, and oh yes, not actually having any health insurance and being essentially homeless.

That's a lot to swallow in the first 20 pages of a supposed feel-good memoir; and to his credit, writing veteran Gill (son of famed New Yorker writer Brendan Gill) pulls it off, basically by being ceaselessly harsh and unusually clear-eyed about his "pre-barista" life as a neolib one-percenter, the same kind of brutal honesty that inspired him to take a coffee-slinging job at the age of 64 at a Starbucks near Harlem where he was the only white employee (after accidentally attending a hiring fair by the company at one of their Manhattan stores without realizing it, having a young manager ask him as a joke, "I don't suppose you're looking for a job, are you?" and he after a moment admitting with candor, "Actually, I am").

It's what tips this book over into minimal readability, his zeal to not cut himself any breaks for his entitled childhood, his handshake-based former career, and the cavalier way he used to treat everyone in life who wasn't a senior corporate executive like him, best seen in his observations about how he himself immediately became invisible to his former co-workers, literally on the sidewalk sometimes when they would walk by him, the moment he put on a polo shirt and a green apron. Unfortunately, though, that still leaves the book with plenty of problems, among the more major being that he sometimes devotes entire chapters to nothing but a detailed, log-like, minute-by-minute breakdown of what a typical day at Starbucks is actually like for an employee, which is the literary equivalent of watching paint dry and had me skipping over huge portions of the manuscript out of pure tedium. (Also, Gill's infinitely upbeat enthusiasm for the empty StarbucksSpeak handed down from faceless marketing employees at the corporate headquarters ["Partners!" "Guests!" "Venti!"] was enough to make me want to claw out my own eyeballs by about two-thirds of the way through.)

It all adds up to an admittedly interesting but still trouble-filled book, one you have to sort of force yourself to like despite the circumstances surrounding the true story, not because of them; and a tale that gets interrupted every time it starts getting good by another reminder of just what a inherent good ol' boy in a good ol' boy network Gill is in, despite him taking a slave-wage job in the service industry. (If you're anything like me, you'll throw your hands in the air in bitter frustration when learning on the last page that Gill managed to get this book optioned to Hollywood for a million dollars, precisely because of all his personal friends from his ad-agency days, and that it currently has Tom Hanks and Gun Van Sant attached to it.) An insightful book but not nearly as insightful as I had hoped it would be, your own mileage with it will profoundly vary based on who you are, your own age and race, and how much tolerance you have for SVP assholes who shrug their shoulders after a disaster and say, "Sowwwwy!"
… (más)
 
Denunciada
jasonpettus | 77 reseñas más. | Aug 8, 2017 |

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Obras
4
Miembros
1,160
Popularidad
#22,147
Valoración
½ 3.3
Reseñas
83
ISBNs
36
Idiomas
6

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