‘The Everything Store’

My first shopping experience at Amazon.com was in the year 1998 when I bought a book (invoice copy below). Infact, I think it was my first online purchase (?) even though I had helped a colleague of mine to put together a small e-commerce site 🙂 After 15 years, and with billions of sales and operations in many countries, Amazon is a fore runner in e-commerce in many countries, with a recent foray in India as well.

“The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon” chronicles the journey of Amazon.com and its founder. It does a good job of balancing both.  Right from the point where Amazon.com was (supposed to be) just an online book store to the gargantuan ‘ Everything Store” that is today, Brad Stone, the author does a commendable job in providing us some valuable ‘behind-the-scenes’ footage

My favorite chapters from the book

  • Chapter 4 (Milliravi), where Jeff Bezos has to take on the Wall Street and its (Indian) detractor.
  • Chapter 7 (A technology company, Not a retailer), where he guides the company’s seemingly impossible transformation into a serious technology player.
  • Chapter 8 (Fiona), where a combination of luck and hard work results in the successful ‘Kindle’
  • Chapter 10 (Expedient Convictions), which provides an excellent example of the founder struggling to re-imagine his company’s popular perception.
  • Appendix (Jeff’s reading list)
My favorite quotes from the book
  • “Communication is a sign of dysfunction. It means people aren’t working together in a close, organic way”
  • “He (Jeff Bezos) had this unbelievable ability to be incredibly intelligent about things he had nothing to do with, and he was totally ruthless about communicating it”
  • “Didn’t want to repeate Steve Job’s mistake”
  • “We are the unstore”

The book is a must read for all the online enthusiasts and professionals alike. Any resemblance of to ‘Citizen Kane’ and ‘Rosebud’ is purely coincidental 🙂

Btw, here’s a must-read excerpt from the book on Livemint

 

 

Robert Duvall’s ‘The Apostle’

“Nanati brathuku natakam” is a beautiful Annamacharya keerthina, popularized by the great singer M.S.Subbalakshmi through her out-of-the world rendition in Revathi raga.

In this keerthana, Annamacharya laments about human existence, its various obstacles in attaining Moksha and says “tegadhu paapamu teeradhu punyamu”. It loosely translates to the  parallel tracks of good and bad acts performed by humans and the inescapable/non-nullifiable consequences of such acts.

‘The Apostle’ is such a story where a Christian preacher struggles to exorcise his bad past even while he constructs a life of good deeds. A detailed synposis is available here on RottenTomatoes.

I saw this movie in 1988/1999 on home-video and Robert Duvall’s performance has stayed with me since then. For many he is the quintessential background guy (Tom Hagen in ‘The Godfather” or ‘Boo Radley” in “To kill a mocking bird”) who delivers a subdued performance but never in the league of a ‘staring in the face’ kind.  ‘The Apostle’ proves this notion wrong.

Robert Duvall is outstanding as the tormented preacher, who is mindful of his own sermon– ‘His judgement cometh and that right soon’. It is his performance that makes the film a must watch for anyone and more so for any actor who wishes to explore realms beyond his comfort zone.

ET, IT…and the rest