Chicken Lips, Wheeler-Dealer, and the Beady-Eyed M. B.A - An
Entrepreneur's Wild Adventures on the New Silk Road
Book description
One man's worldwide entrepreneurial adventure…and how to follow in
his footsteps
Part memoir, part practical guide for any budding entrepreneur,
Chicken Lips, Wheeler-Dealer and the Beady-Eyed M. B.A. is
the story of how one man abandoned a cushy publishing job in Manhattan
to pursue his dream of working for himself. Spanning eleven years, the
book tells the sometimes moving, sometimes funny, and always inspiring
story of Frank Farwell, who rediscovered a forgotten product from
China and cashed in on a readily defined American market niche. A
fascinating look at the transitional years of modern China, the book
is packed with helpful information for anyone keen to leave well-paid
tedium for the Wild West of self-employment.
As the interest in self-employment rises, Chicken Lips,
Wheeler-Dealer, and the Beady-Eyed M. B.A. fills an important
niche. Covering the successes and failures that mark the path of the
committed entrepreneur, the book entertains and instructs using
concrete, real-life examples that clearly illustrate the dos and
don'ts of running your own business.
- A non-fiction look at the world of self-employment that uses a
real-life story to illustrate successes and pitfalls
- Includes a "Lessons Learned" appendix that succinctly
explain the most important takeaways for starting your own business
- A compelling insight into entrepreneurship that spans continents
The story of a tenderfoot company and its neophyte boss who maneuvers
his way in and out of trouble to ultimately build a business that is
still thriving today,
Chicken Lips, Wheeler-Dealer, and the
Beady-Eyed M. B.A.
is a fascinating, informative look at entrepreneurship in the
twenty-first century.
Frank Farwell
worked as a cub newspaper reporter for the Claremont, New Hampshire,
Daily Eagle
, and Vermont's Windsor Chronicle
, then enrolled in Northwestern University's M. B.A. program. After two
semesters he took a summer job at Times-Mirror Magazines in New York and
stayed on to become managing editor of Ski
magazine, and then staff editor at Ziff-Davis' Yachting
. Four years later, tired of publishing's modest pay scale, he quit
gainful employment to found a tiny company in his attic. His staff- and
freelance-written articles have appeared in The New York Times,
Signature, Ski, Backpacker, Yachts and Yachting (U. K.), AOPA Pilot,
IFR, The Guide to Cross Country Skiing, Ski Business, Harrowsmith,
Kiplinger's Changing Times, The Kazi (Japan), Cross Country Skier,
Outdoor Life, Marathon World, Nordic World,
and In Business
. He has been a commercial- and instrument-rated pilot with 2,000 hours
flight time, and in his 50's raced canoe and cross-country ski events
throughout the Midwest and eastern Canada. He has three children and
lives in the northern Great Lakes region. This is his first book.