The 48 Laws of Power is the best-selling book offers a collection of 48 laws that show people how to gain power, preserve it, and defend themselves against those powerful people who make their lives miserable.
When Andrew Bynum walks into a room, people step aside.
At 7 feet tall and 285 pounds, Bynum is the starting center for the NBA champion Los Angeles Lakers. He hurls his Mack-Truck-like shoulders against some of the biggest and baddest men on the planet every game night.
Bynum recently came across a book that was as ruthless as anyone he’s encountered in the NBA. “At first, I was shocked,” he says. “I thought it was cutthroat.”
Bynum started reading “The 48 Laws of Power.” The best-selling book offers a collection of 48 laws that show people how to gain power, preserve it, and defend themselves against those powerful people who make their lives miserable.
Unlike most self-help books, “The 48 Laws” offers advice that the author freely admits is, at times, cunning and amoral. It includes lessons like “Law 1: Never outshine the master” and “Law 14: Pose as a friend, work as a spy.”
The lessons are distilled from colorful anecdotes lifted from 4,000 years of history. They include insights into the scheming of powerful people such as Al Capone, P.T. Barnum and Henry Kissinger.
The book has proved to be so popular that it has spawned several sequels, rapper
50 Cent co-wrote the book “The 50th Law” after celebration of the mass “The 48 Laws of Power.”
The 48 Laws Of Power
Amoral, cunning, ruthless, and instructive, this piercing work distills three thousand years of the history of power in to forty-eight well explicated laws. As attention–grabbing in its design as it is in its content, this bold volume outlines the laws of power in their unvarnished essence, synthesizing the philosophies of Machiavelli, Sun-tzu, Carl von Clausewitz, and other great thinkers. Some laws teach the need for prudence (”Law 1: Never Outshine the Master”), the virtue of stealth (”Law 3: Conceal Your Intentions”), and many demand the total absence of mercy (”Law 15: Crush Your Enemy Totally”), but like it or not, all have applications in real life. Illustrated through the tactics of Queen Elizabeth I, Henry Kissinger, P. T. Barnum, and other famous figures who have wielded–or been victimized by–power, these laws will fascinate any reader interested in gaining, observing, or defending against ultimate control.
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