جزییات کتاب
اثری دیگر از نویسنده پرفروش کتاب های The 48 Laws of Power و The Laws of Human Nature
"رابرت گرین" به نوعی استاد ارائه درس های عمیق، فراتر از زمان و خارق العاده از وقایع تاریخی است تا با کمک این موارد به خوانندگانش بفهماند چطور یک دشمن را از پا در بیارید. در کتاب The 33 Strategies of War "گرین" یک کتاب منحصربفرد را خلق کرده تا با کمک آن تمام استراتژی های لازم را درک کنید.
این کتاب که به نوعی اثرمعاصر The Art of War از Sun Tzu تلقی می شود، از تمدنی به تمدن دیگر پل زده، سیاست های مختلف را ترکیب کرده و متون مذهبی و فلسفی هزاران سال قبل را واکاوی می کند تا از درون آنها 33 استراتژی تاثیر گذار استخراج کند.
به وفور می توان مثال های زیادی از تاریخ و کسانی که آن را شکل داده اند در این کتاب یافت. از ناپلئون تا مارگارت تاچر، از شاکا زولو تا لرد نلسون، از هانیبال تا اولیس سنت گرانت، فیلم های از حمله های مغول، شمشیر های سامورایی و دیپلمات ها، همه و همه در 33 فصل فصل گنجانده شده تا 33 استراتژی را به شما آموزش دهد که به شما در پیروزی در نبرد زندگی کمک کند.
استراتژی های هجومی را فرا بگیرید که به شما در قرار گرفتن در موضع قدرت هنگام مذاکرات کمک می کند، یا استراتژی های دفاعی را بیاموزید که شما را در پاسخ به شرایط خطرناک یاری داده و شما را از درگیری هایی که غیر قابل پیروزی هستند دور می کند.
Summary by sobhan.marshall
From Publishers WeeklyAs in his bestselling The 48 Laws of Power, Greene puts a modern spin on wisdom that has stood the test of history, only this time his role model is Sun Tzu rather than Machiavelli. The argument is fairly standard: despite our most noble intentions, "aggressive impulses that are impossible to ignore or repress" make military combat a fitting metaphor for getting ahead in life. Greene's advice covers everything from steeling one's mind for battle to specific defensive and offensive tactics—notably, the final section on "dirty" warfare is one of the book's longest. Historical lessons are outlined and interpreted, with amplifying quotations crammed into the margins. Not all of the examples are drawn from the battlefield; in one section, Greene skips nimbly from Lyndon Johnson's tenacity to Julius Caesar's decisiveness, from Joan Crawford's refusal to compromise to Ted Williams's competitive drive. Alfred Hitchcock, he says, embodies "the detached-Buddha tactic" of appearing uninvolved while remaining in total control. The diversity of subject matter compensates for occasional lapses into stilted warriorese ("arm yourself with prudence, and never completely lay down your arms, not even for friends"). For those willing to embrace its martial conceit, Greene's compendium offers inspiration and entertainment in equal measure. *(Jan. 23) * Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From BooklistGreene and "producer" Joost Elffers are the Machiavellians who brought us The 48 Laws of Power (1998) and The Art of Seduction (2001), and their latest book similarly purports to distill the profundities of history for personal gain. Unapologetically premised on Hobbesian "all that is social is war" bromides, this account collects parables of strategic success and error from a diverse cast of military and nonmilitary historical figures. Its lessons are presented self-help-book style in chapters titled "Maneuver Them into Weakness" and "Seem to Work for the Interests of Others While Furthering Your Own" and flanked by a withering barrage of reiterative marginalia. Most books this cynical (and this repetitive) need a sense of humor to be readable, something this book apparently lacks. Its quasi-spiritual tone, though perhaps increasing its attractiveness to the impressionable, is also trying at times. But those readers who push through to the end (or flip ahead) will find a curiously contemporary section on modern terrorism cloaking a surprisingly specific commentary on al-Qaeda and antiterrorism strategy. Politics by other means? Brendan DriscollCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved