staggerwing
One of the Regulars
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- 284
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- Washington DC
LizzieMaine said:One thing important to keep in mind about Carnegie is that it was targeted to a generation very different than that of today: the people who were buying and reading the book in 1939 -- and there were millions of them -- were people who were in all likelihood the first members of their families to graduate from high school, and quite possibly the first members of their families even to *attend* high school. The sort of business-world social skills that are taken for granted today did not come naturally to that generation, people often one generation removed from Ellis Island or the deep rural farmland.
A lot of Carnegie's material might seem crashingly obvious today -- but seventy years ago, it was the first time any of this had been put into the popular press.
I read it in 1979, not 1939 and perhaps the material was obvious to most folks, but it wasn't obvious to me. Before reading this book and putting the material into practice, I often wondered why I wasn't "well liked" (heck, I thought I was a pretty swell guy!). Maybe those who came from normal, well adjusted families learned this stuff from parents and siblings, but I missed out on those lessons. One thing I did notice is that the changes I made in the manner in which I relate to people based on the book were subtle, and almost seemed trivial at the time. The results however, were anything but trivial. I will add that based on my day-today life experiences today, it does not appear that many people out there apply the "obvious" principles contained in this material.