How Starbucks Saved My Life
By (Author) Michael Gates Gill
Transworld Publishers (Division of Random House Australia)
Bantam
3rd December 2007
Australia
General
Non Fiction
True stories of heroism, endurance and survival
647.95092
Paperback
272
Width 157mm, Height 233mm, Spine 20mm
362g
Mitch Albom meets Nigel Marsh in this moving memoir. In his fifties Michael Gates Gill had it all- a mansion in the suburbs, a loving family, a six-figure salary and a top job at an ad agency. Then, he lost it all. He was downsized at work, an affair ended his twenty-year marriage. He was diagnosed with a slow-growing brain tumour. Gill had no money, no health insurance and no prospects. Then he met Crystal, a Starbucks manager from the other side of town and began a dramatic transformation from a person with ingrained prejudices and class superiority to a humbler, happier person whose world had been cracked wide open. Like Nigel Marsh's hugely successful Fat, Forty and Fired, this heart-warming book describes how one man took life-changing events and embraced them, turning them into something overwhelmingly positive. It also shows, with charming simplicity, how it is still possible for people to help one another, reaching across previous habits of prejudice and distrust, turning failure into success.
The son of New Yorker writer Brendan Gill, Michael Gates Gill was a creative director at J.Walter Thompson Adverstising, where he was employed for over twenty-five years. He lives in New York within walking distance from the Starbucks store where he works, and has no plans to retire from what he calls the best job he's ever had.