《成為喬布斯》:記者與天才
????每本關(guān)于史蒂夫?喬布斯的新書(shū)都會(huì)被拿來(lái)同沃爾特?艾薩克森的《史蒂夫?喬布斯傳》相比,后者為數(shù)百萬(wàn)讀者描繪了那位創(chuàng)立(并重建)蘋(píng)果公司的男人。 ????但那些與喬布斯走得最近、最了解他的人,認(rèn)為艾薩克森的敘述有失準(zhǔn)確。蘋(píng)果現(xiàn)任首席執(zhí)行官蒂姆?庫(kù)克在三年后直言不諱地表示:“我認(rèn)為艾薩克森的作品完全是在幫倒忙。該書(shū)只是重新整理了已有的一系列材料,關(guān)注的僅僅是喬布斯個(gè)性中很小一部分。” ????我們也不能為此責(zé)備艾薩克森。他是位技巧嫻熟的記者,在很短的時(shí)間內(nèi)就獲取了大量材料。但直到喬布斯生前的最后一年半,他才有了足夠的時(shí)間來(lái)專(zhuān)門(mén)準(zhǔn)備這一主題。此外,他的職責(zé)是講述喬布斯做了什么事,而非介紹喬布斯是個(gè)什么人。 ????對(duì)喬布斯足夠了解,以至于能夠講述那個(gè)故事的記者可謂屈指可數(shù)。曾就職于《新聞周刊》的史蒂夫?列維是其中之一,《紐約時(shí)報(bào)》的約翰?馬爾科夫也算一個(gè)。此外,還有《華爾街日?qǐng)?bào)》和《財(cái)富》雜志記者布倫特?施倫德,他可能是最了解喬布斯的人了。 ????《成為喬布斯》是他與長(zhǎng)期供職于《財(cái)富》的同事里克?特策利合著的作品,但本書(shū)卻是以第一視角——施倫德的第一視角撰寫(xiě)的,因?yàn)檫@本質(zhì)上是施倫德的故事,講述了一名記者與喬布斯結(jié)識(shí)25年來(lái)的所見(jiàn)所聞。 ????本書(shū)做了大量售前宣傳工作。特策利擔(dān)任執(zhí)行主編的《快公司》一直在連載最新章節(jié),就像一次挖一勺冰淇淋一樣。 ????施倫德的故事往往來(lái)自錄音采訪,正是通過(guò)這些故事,我們會(huì)像他了解喬布斯一樣,逐步認(rèn)識(shí)喬布斯。也正是通過(guò)這些故事,每位讀者都能以自己的視角找到本書(shū)核心問(wèn)題的答案: ????一位如此魯莽自大的年輕人,如何能成為當(dāng)代最具遠(yuǎn)見(jiàn)卓識(shí)的商業(yè)領(lǐng)袖? ????喬布斯與施倫德建立了友誼,接受他長(zhǎng)時(shí)間的采訪,打電話跟他閑聊,抱怨。施倫德會(huì)去喬布斯家里看他,喬布斯也會(huì)去醫(yī)院看施倫德,而他們最后在醫(yī)院會(huì)面的頻率之高,是之前誰(shuí)也沒(méi)料到的。 ????兩人相識(shí)于1986年,當(dāng)時(shí)喬布斯正在奮力宣傳他的新公司NeXT。施倫德在《華爾街日?qǐng)?bào)》刊發(fā)了一篇并未喬布斯所愿的專(zhuān)題報(bào)道,但他認(rèn)為這位記者不錯(cuò),不是個(gè)笨蛋。 ????施倫德在全書(shū)的開(kāi)頭寫(xiě)道:“不發(fā)表特寫(xiě)文章,是我們這段長(zhǎng)達(dá)25年的友誼中確立的第一準(zhǔn)則。在我們的關(guān)系中,有一條基本原則始終無(wú)比明確:我是記者,他是信息提供者和報(bào)道對(duì)象?!?/p> ????2011年10月,想到自己在與喬布斯最后一通電話中抨擊了他,施倫德懷著難過(guò)的心情離開(kāi)了僅限受邀者參加的喬布斯追思會(huì)。當(dāng)時(shí)喬布斯請(qǐng)施倫德去看看他,但施倫德情緒不佳。他沒(méi)有意識(shí)到死神已經(jīng)臨近了喬布斯,還利用這一機(jī)會(huì)大發(fā)牢騷,抱怨他們的關(guān)系。“幾分鐘后,我說(shuō)完了,話筒里一時(shí)無(wú)聲。然后他說(shuō),他真的十分抱歉?!?/p> ????施倫德曾經(jīng)試著找個(gè)時(shí)間去探望喬布斯,然后很快就取消了這個(gè)計(jì)劃。這件事讓他終身遺憾。 ????強(qiáng)烈推薦本書(shū)。(財(cái)富中文網(wǎng)) ????譯者:嚴(yán)匡正 ????審校:任文科 |
????Every new book about Steve Jobs will forever be measured against Walter Isaacson’s biography, which defined, for millions of readers, the man who built (and rebuilt) Apple. ????But the people closest to Jobs — the people who knew him best — say Isaacson missed the mark. “I thought the Isaacson book did him a tremendous disservice,” says Tim Cook, speaking out three years later. “It was just a rehash of a bunch of stuff that had already been written, and focused on small parts of his personality.” ????Isaacson’s not really to blame. He’s a skilled journalist, and he mastered an enormous amount of material in a very short time. But he didn’t get to spend much quality time with his subject until the last year and a half of Jobs’ life. Besides, he was hired to tell the story of what Steve Jobs did, not who Steve Jobs was. ????There are only a handful of journalists who knew Jobs well enough to tell that story. There’s Steve Levy, formerly of Newsweek. There’s John Markoff of the New York Times. And there’s Brent Schlender of the Wall Street and Fortune, who may have known Jobs best of all. ????Becoming Steve Jobs was co-written with Rick Tetzeli, a long-time Fortune colleague, but it is told in the first person — Schlender’s first person — because it is, at heart, Schlender’s story, the story of a journalist’s 25-year relationship with a source. ????The book comes richly pre-publicized. Fast Company, where Tetzeli is executive editor, has been dishing out the newsiest chunks like ice cream, one scoop at a time. ????But it’s through Schlender’s stories, freshly told, often from taped interviews, that we get to know Steve Jobs as Schlender knew him. And it’s through these stories that each reader will assemble his or her own answer to the book’s central question: ????How did a young man so reckless and arrogant become the most effective visionary business leader of our time?” ????Jobs cultivated Schlender, gave him long interviews, called him to gossip and complain. Schlender visited Jobs at home; Jobs visited Schlender in the hospital, where they ended up together more often than either would have wished. ????Their first meeting — in 1986, when Jobs was drumming up publicity for NeXT — didn’t yield the Wall Street Journal feature story Jobs was hoping for, but it did convince him that Schlender was okay, not a bozo. ????“Not writing a feature was the first salvo in the twenty-five-year-long negotiation that marked our relationship,” writes Schlender in the prologue that kickstarts the book. “There was never a minute where the basic terms of our relationship weren’t clear: I was the reporter, he was the source and subject.” ????And yet Schlender leaves Jobs’ invitation-only memorial service in October 2011 overcome with emotion for having lit into his source in their last phone call. Jobs had invited Schlender to pay a visit. But Schlender was in a dark mood. Not realizing how close Jobs was to death, he used the opportunity to air his grievances about their relationship. “After a few minutes, once I’d had my say, there was a silence on the line. And then he said he was really sorry.” ????Schlender made a halfhearted attempt to schedule a visit but quickly gave up, to his everlasting regret. ????Highly recommended. |
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