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Customer Reviews:Average Customer Rating: Fair and interesting, but not quite specific enough at times A fair, balanced, sympathetic look at a remarkable man. I found this book, overall, to be very lively and interesting. Great addition to the literature on Hershey The life and legacy of Milton Hershey is one of the more intriguing stories in American business and history. The debates of ruthless business man or utopian planer are debated frequently and this book does an excellent job of putting it in perspective. It is light and well written allowing easy access to the story of Milton Hershey and his legacies including his town, his company and his favorite, the Milton Hershey School for Boys. I have to agree with the other reviewers in echoing that this is an unbiased and critical account of Hershey's life. The author finds fault when there is fault and puts his success into perspective showing how Hershey set the tone for the progressive businessman. For those who are looking for a purely corporate history this book is not for you (try Emperors of Chocolate). This book is about the Hershey family and the candy company they built along with the town. As a frequent visitor to Hershey I found the history of the town to be fascinating. Overall well worth the time to read. very interesting biography This is a very interesting book about Milton Hershey's life. I read this book around the time the residents of Hershey were upset about the prospect of the candy company being sold to one of the other big candy makers. It helped me, as a resident of the local area, to have more appreciation for "all things Hershey". It's exciting to think of a man building this company from the ground up and to imagine what life was like when it was happening. The book also helped me to appreciate the fact that Milton Hershey's REAL passion was helping the children in the Milton Hershey School, and if he were alive today (I believe that) he would have seriously considered selling the candy company as well. Sorry, I know that wouldn't sound good to the residents of Hershey, but there was a time in his life when he nearly did sell the company. The Great American Chocolate Book The only thing I really knew before reading this book is that Hershey chocolate has been around a long time and there is a town themed after it somewhere in Pennsylvania near Amish country. Boy was I undereducated in this realm. Hershey:, the legend and the man Michael D'Antonio has given us a serious biography of a complicated, but highly admirable, man. A "chocolate king" who founded a town and created and endowed schools and home for orphans is not a figure to be treated lightly, and D'Antonio does not fail. While there is no question that D'Antonio likes his subject, Hershey is not given a free pass. His enormous philanthropy is described right alongside irrational temper tantrums and firings. Spying on worker's drinking habits is described alongside his own gambling habits. The rise of the Hersey empire, and the town he founded, is described in great detail. The book opens with the drama of a challenge to the Trust of his school for orphans and the reality of business in this day and age. "What would Milton do?" is the question. What the book tells us is that it is by no means certain what Milton would do. He had contemplated selling his empire at more than one point, ensuring the resources for the continued care of the orphans in his charge. We see the rise and life of the Hershey empire, and Milton's relationships with others. The possibility of the true nature of his wife's illness is mentioned and described. Some have been offended by this, I'd suggest they get over it. It has no bearing on what type of person she was, or how much he loved her. We see the evolution of the business, the international interests, the town and school. It is a satisfying read. The only additional material I would have liked is some more description of Hershey's interactions with some of the other business and political leaders of the day. We are told of a feud with Wrigley, and the suspicion that Wrigley had cheated in gambling, but little else. We know of TR's trust busting, and that Hershey was considered to be quite apart from the Robber Barons of the day. Did TR and Hershey ever interact beyond the one or two mentioned invitations? If so, how? This historical information may not exist in the archives, but was the only gap I felt while reading. | | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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