More Than Money: True Stories of People Who Learned Life's Ultimate Lesson

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NEW - excellent, clean condition, hard bound with dust jacket *More Than Money: True Stories of People Who Learned Life's Ultimate Lesson* by Cavuto, Neil* Publisher: Regan ... Books, 2004 ed. Read more Show Less

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Overview

Neil Cavuto's triumphs over cancer and multiple sclerosis were made possible by a group of extraordinary individuals who taught him that even the worst tragedies can become stepping stones to the greatest of victories. When Neil was still in his twenties, he was unexpectedly diagnosed with cancer. At the time, Neil was well on his way to building a successful career as a financial reporter. With the help of others, he was able to fight off the disease and become one of CNBC's most popular anchors. After Neil took the helm of Fox News Channel's business news operation in 1996, disaster struck again: he was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. Although initially discouraged, Neil received support from friends and strangers
... See more details below

Overview

Neil Cavuto's triumphs over cancer and multiple sclerosis were made possible by a group of extraordinary individuals who taught him that even the worst tragedies can become stepping stones to the greatest of victories. When Neil was still in his twenties, he was unexpectedly diagnosed with cancer. At the time, Neil was well on his way to building a successful career as a financial reporter. With the help of others, he was able to fight off the disease and become one of CNBC's most popular anchors. After Neil took the helm of Fox News Channel's business news operation in 1996, disaster struck again: he was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. Although initially discouraged, Neil received support from friends and strangers alike who shared with him their own stories of how they overcame crises in their lives.

In More Than Money, Neil recounts stories from the many people who motivated him to continue his own career. They suffered many setbacks, from medical illnesses to financial bankruptcy, but they also represent some of the greatest personal successes in the world today. They include people like Evelyn Lauder, the cosmetics executive whose battle with breast cancer led her to pursue a life of activism and philanthropy, and John Huntsman, who overcame two forms of cancer to build one of the largest petrochemical companies in the world and found one the most prominent cancer research centers. They are the stories of people who turned unspeakable tragedies into unbelievable triumphs, building better lives not only for themselves but for countless others along the way.

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780060096434
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Publication date: 6/1/2004
  • Pages: 304
  • Product dimensions: 5.96 (w) x 9.72 (h) x 0.88 (d)

Read an Excerpt

More Than Money

True Stories of People Who Learned Life's Ultimate Lesson
By Cavuto, Neil

ReganBooks

ISBN: 0060096438

Chapter One

When Life Throws You A Curve Ball

I'm not a huge baseball fan, but I like the game, and I am impressed by the New York Yankees. Because they've won so many championships and World Series, and because they embody the character of New York: unyielding, cocky, very much in-your-face.

That makes all the more odd the unassuming skipper who runs this bunch. In the hurricane that is the big media in the Big Apple, Yankee Manager Joe Torre is the calm eye in the storm: solid, sure, dependable.

I marvel at the way this thrice-fired manager, in a job that tends to age men quicker than the U.S. presidency, only grows calmer over the years, and more self-assured.

He never screams or throws fits. He never berates his players on national TV. If they get hot, he lets them cool down. He prefers talking to each of them privately, rather than en masse or in public.

As he told a gathering of hospital executives in June 2001, "I like communication and talking to people one on one. I don't like screaming. I like to make sense."

Torre makes plenty of sense to his team, and to New Yorkers, and he surrounds himself with people who are much like him: diplomatic doers, not brash talkers.

A good example is Mel Stottlemyre, the quiet, modest pitcher-turned-coach who, like his boss, insists on working out his Yankee pitchers' troubles harmoniously, without fanfare or bravado. He has a rapport with his players that press reports about him understate.

Like Torre, players don't just like him, they trust him. They know he'll be there to shield them from the New York media glare. Pitchers like Dwight Gooden, Mike Hampton, and Andy Pettite, have all said that they wouldn't have become the successes they did become had it not been for Stottlemyre.

Torre and Stottlemyre proved to be powerful dynamos behind the Yankees' success and all those post-1996 division, league, and World Series championships.

As significant as their baseball achievements are, though, it's the way each man handled personal crises that made me decide to include them in this book.

Torre, in 1999, and Stottlemyre, in 2000, had bigger worries than winning baseball games and titles on their minds.

They each had cancer, and their initial prospects looked dicey. Stottlemyre was afflicted with multiple myeloma, a form of cancer that's usually fatal. Torre had a particularly virulent form of prostate cancer -- what doctors call a fast-moving malignancy.

Any time you hear the word cancer, you're rightly shell-shocked.

Just the word scares people. Cancer: the Big "C."

Years before my mother was diagnosed with a brain tumor, I remember being aware that her biggest fear was getting cancer.

It wasn't so much the hopeless prospects for the disease at the time, but its debilitating final days.

For strong and vibrant people like my mother it was particularly cruel, sapping them of the energy and determination that made them unique, in the end reducing them to little more than human vegetables, painfully closing out their final days.

Heart attacks and car accidents actually take more lives, but cancer and its consequences have a singular dominance of our psyche and fears.

People who do survive cancer feel special. I know I do.

Not a day goes by, even with my MS, that I don't think of cancer returning; maybe another bout of Hodgkin's, maybe some lymphoma.

You name it, I worry about it.

And no cancer survivor ever loses that queasy feeling that it could happen all over again.

As traumatizing as it is to learn the diagnosis, and understand how your life has been changed forever, it's worse when you're in a very public job. There's nowhere to hide. Nowhere to cry. Nowhere to gather your senses.

There's an intense pressure on public figures who have to work through very private issues. Almost as important as how they privately deal with their issues or diseases, is how they do so when many people, sometimes across the country, are watching them closely.

Some handle the pressure and personal issues well. Sadly, a lot of them do not.

Magnifying the stress on Torre and Stottlemyre, as they deal with scary, preferably private, life-threatening cancers, was that they were in a profession that transcends business and inspires kids of all ages, working in the sports world's biggest fishbowl -- Nev York -- and with America's most scrutinized baseball team -- the New York Yankees.

Unlike business leaders being watched by shareholders curious about how they were doing, the Yankees manager and coach knew that millions of fans were wondering and worrying.

My father once said that you can tell a lot about a person by how he or she handles sickness. The way these two baseball veterans handled theirs is revealing and admirable.

As I discovered, they focused far more on others than on themselves. I'm sure that in private they had their difficult periods, dealing with the stark fact of cancer and their individual fears and doubts. Publicly, though, they put it all aside and led by example. No matter what their pain and suffering, they were going to hold it together -- not only for the team, but for the world. That's an enormously selfless act, at a time when it would have been understandable to be selfish. These men were not.

Continues...

Excerpted from More Than Money by Cavuto, Neil Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

First Chapter

More Than Money
True Stories of People Who Learned Life's Ultimate Lesson

Chapter One

When Life Throws You A Curve Ball

I'm not a huge baseball fan, but I like the game, and I am impressed by the New York Yankees. Because they've won so many championships and World Series, and because they embody the character of New York: unyielding, cocky, very much in-your-face.

That makes all the more odd the unassuming skipper who runs this bunch. In the hurricane that is the big media in the Big Apple, Yankee Manager Joe Torre is the calm eye in the storm: solid, sure, dependable.

I marvel at the way this thrice-fired manager, in a job that tends to age men quicker than the U.S. presidency, only grows calmer over the years, and more self-assured.

He never screams or throws fits. He never berates his players on national TV. If they get hot, he lets them cool down. He prefers talking to each of them privately, rather than en masse or in public.

As he told a gathering of hospital executives in June 2001, "I like communication and talking to people one on one. I don't like screaming. I like to make sense."

Torre makes plenty of sense to his team, and to New Yorkers, and he surrounds himself with people who are much like him: diplomatic doers, not brash talkers.

A good example is Mel Stottlemyre, the quiet, modest pitcher-turned-coach who, like his boss, insists on working out his Yankee pitchers' troubles harmoniously, without fanfare or bravado. He has a rapport with his players that press reports about him understate.

Like Torre, players don't just like him, they trust him. They know he'll be there to shield them from the New York media glare. Pitchers like Dwight Gooden, Mike Hampton, and Andy Pettite, have all said that they wouldn't have become the successes they did become had it not been for Stottlemyre.

Torre and Stottlemyre proved to be powerful dynamos behind the Yankees' success and all those post-1996 division, league, and World Series championships.

As significant as their baseball achievements are, though, it's the way each man handled personal crises that made me decide to include them in this book.

Torre, in 1999, and Stottlemyre, in 2000, had bigger worries than winning baseball games and titles on their minds.

They each had cancer, and their initial prospects looked dicey. Stottlemyre was afflicted with multiple myeloma, a form of cancer that's usually fatal. Torre had a particularly virulent form of prostate cancer -- what doctors call a fast-moving malignancy.

Any time you hear the word cancer, you're rightly shell-shocked.

Just the word scares people. Cancer: the Big "C."

Years before my mother was diagnosed with a brain tumor, I remember being aware that her biggest fear was getting cancer.

It wasn't so much the hopeless prospects for the disease at the time, but its debilitating final days.

For strong and vibrant people like my mother it was particularly cruel, sapping them of the energy and determination that made them unique, in the end reducing them to little more than human vegetables, painfully closing out their final days.

Heart attacks and car accidents actually take more lives, but cancer and its consequences have a singular dominance of our psyche and fears.

People who do survive cancer feel special. I know I do.

Not a day goes by, even with my MS, that I don't think of cancer returning; maybe another bout of Hodgkin's, maybe some lymphoma.

You name it, I worry about it.

And no cancer survivor ever loses that queasy feeling that it could happen all over again.

As traumatizing as it is to learn the diagnosis, and understand how your life has been changed forever, it's worse when you're in a very public job. There's nowhere to hide. Nowhere to cry. Nowhere to gather your senses.

There's an intense pressure on public figures who have to work through very private issues. Almost as important as how they privately deal with their issues or diseases, is how they do so when many people, sometimes across the country, are watching them closely.

Some handle the pressure and personal issues well. Sadly, a lot of them do not.

Magnifying the stress on Torre and Stottlemyre, as they deal with scary, preferably private, life-threatening cancers, was that they were in a profession that transcends business and inspires kids of all ages, working in the sports world's biggest fishbowl -- Nev York -- and with America's most scrutinized baseball team -- the New York Yankees.

Unlike business leaders being watched by shareholders curious about how they were doing, the Yankees manager and coach knew that millions of fans were wondering and worrying.

My father once said that you can tell a lot about a person by how he or she handles sickness. The way these two baseball veterans handled theirs is revealing and admirable.

As I discovered, they focused far more on others than on themselves. I'm sure that in private they had their difficult periods, dealing with the stark fact of cancer and their individual fears and doubts. Publicly, though, they put it all aside and led by example. No matter what their pain and suffering, they were going to hold it together -- not only for the team, but for the world. That's an enormously selfless act, at a time when it would have been understandable to be selfish. These men were not.

More Than Money
True Stories of People Who Learned Life's Ultimate Lesson
. Copyright © by Neil Cavuto. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.
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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 13, 2005

    THE PRICE OF SUCCESS!

    This is a mesmerizing account of people who take on life fully, and succeed. Author Cavuto shares true stories of CEO's who faced all kinds of setbacks in their quest for success; dyslexia, financial loss, cancer, depression. Yet they survived and achieved, because of their intense hard work, and committment. Now from their pinnacle of power as CEO's of their respective companies, they help others applying compassion and honesty. Their professional tradegies and triumphs are inspirational. You will recognize their names as you read this book, and you will be amazed at the challenges they overcame, ----which you never knew about. No whining, or complaining or playing the 'blame game.' They took the curves thrown at them by life, got up and climbed right back up the ladder of success. Most encouraging of all, is the author's own riveting experience with cancer and multiple sclerosis. I watch him daily on the Fox News channel, hosting 'Your World with Neil Cavuto.' He is factual, humorous, incisive. He and his guests are always informative. The price of success can be costly. This book is a contribution to measurement of real success in the business world. It's not all about money. Honor in business is possible.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 4, 2005

    Examples for Everyone!

    These are true stories of courage, bravery, and success, told by a courageous, brave, and successful man. We can all learn from the Mr. Cavuto, and also from the people he profiles in this book. Giving up and giving in never yields positive results. Learning how to gain strength from seemingly hopeless situations can bring anyone past what might appear to be boundaries in life. Each profile is riveting, and teaches a lesson reflected perfectly by the title of the book! Thank you, Mr. Cavuto!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted March 22, 2005

    Ouch

    Sorry to say, but this book is a mess. Poorly written and *extremely* poorly researched, I had a hard time connecting with any of the individuals profiled or learning about their conditions, try as I might. This book is so low on content and so full of mistakes that I'm left addressing the question 'What were you thinking?' to Regan Books and not the author. Look elsewhere for inspiration.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted July 10, 2004

    Not very thoughtful

    Neil Cavuto always seems to speak bias with his business centered television. His words dont' go far beyond traditional corporate America. Cavuto has had to deal with some very challenging problems in his relatively young life. For that anyone deserves credit however his views are far too conservative.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted December 11, 2009

    No text was provided for this review.

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    Posted February 21, 2011

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