Author:Lynn Williams
Perfect Positive Thinking is essential reading for anyone who wants to feel optimistic and enthusiastic. Written by a professional life coach, with years of experience in the field, it gives practical advice on how to overcome negative feelings, explains how to deal with problems like anxiety and self-doubt, and provides helpful tips on how to gain energy, motivation and a sense of purpose. Covering everything from exercising to eating, and from stretching to sleep, Perfect Positive Thinking has all you need to feel happy and confident.
The Perfect series is a range of practical guides that give clear and straightforward advice on everything from getting your first job to choosing your baby's name. Written by experienced authors offering tried-and-tested tips, each book contains all you need to get it right first time.
Enthralling… A terrific, timely, informative book… Witt is an authoritative, enthusiastic, sure-footed guide, and his research and his storytelling are exemplary… How Music Got Free stands comparison to The Social Network
—— Nick Hornby , Sunday TimesIncredible, possibly canonical. . . . A story that's too bizarre to make up, but needed to be told. . . . Even if you're not a music geek, How Music Got Free is one of the most gripping investigative books of the year.
—— ViceLike Bond meets 28 Days Later... Witt tells a thrilling tale, with a cast of music biz bigwigs, painstaking German boffins, and pirates and petty thieves. Witt’s writing reminded me of all my favourite modern essayists: Remnick, Franzen and John Jeremiah Sullivan. I loved it
—— Colin Greenwood, RadioheadBrilliant... Like many great works of investigative journalism it makes it clear that this is one of those stories you think you know until you realise you don’t
—— John Niven , The SpectatorA fantastic book and a scintillating achievement
—— Felix Martin, author of Money: the unauthorised biography[How Music Got Free] has the clear writing and brisk reportorial acumen of a Michael Lewis book
—— Dwight Garner , New York TimesReads like an underworld crime story… Engaging even on the tech side of the story… Witt is concise and very funny
—— Bob Stanley , New StatesmanClosely reported and brilliantly written … highly entertaining… Exemplary in its clarity… this story is full of surprises as well
—— Steven Poole , GuardianThis is the definitive history of a media revolution… I was hooked late into the night… There are lots of big lessons here… it is the story of all creative industries, and in the end, the internet itself
—— Hugo Rifkind , The TimesYou need to get hold of Stephen Witt's jaundiced, whip-smart, superbly reported and indispensable How Music Got Free
—— Washington PostFascinating… An engrossing story… surely the year's most important music book
—— IndependentAstonishing
—— GuardianEnthralling
—— Sunday TimesAn accomplished first book… So compelling
—— EconomistLucid, page-turning, engaging… A cross between a nail-biting true-crime story and the type of blow-by-blow books penned by Bob Woodward… Deeply sourced and dramatic
—— Scott Timberg , Literary ReviewWitt's first book has great strengths — primarily that he is a natural storyteller, with an eye for character and the ability to digest large amounts of technical detail, and turn it into a colourful tale
—— Financial TimesScorching investigative history of how the music industry found itself staring catastrophe in the face... Full of colourful characters... Essential reading for anyone who cares about the future of our creative industries
—— The BooksellerThis is a riveting account of greed, huge characters and the collapse of a kind of empire, and will be the benchmark by which future books are judged
—— Jamie Atkins, 4 stars , Record CollectorThe richest explanation to date about how the arrival of the MP3 upended almost everything about how music is distributed, consumed and stored
—— Dwight Garner , New York TimesA rare thing… Compulsively readable
—— Andrew Orlowski , RegisterDefinitive exploration of the turmoil the music industry has experiences in the last 20 years
—— Daily MailA surprisingly engaging guide
—— Rachel Farrow , UK Press SyndicationRemarkable
—— Ed Power , Irish IndependentHats off to Witt…because the book he’s delivered is sensational: lucid, informative, breathlessly exciting, with the pounding narrative tempo of a first-class thriller
—— Allan Jones , UncutWitt brings the many-layered tale to vibrant life
—— Andrew Hill , Financial TimesWitt’s sharp prose and pace grips... His narrative hurtles like a thriller toward the “sin cleansing” development of iTunes and the profit shift from recorded to live music. It is – in both senses – a ripping yarn
—— Helen Brown , TelegraphOne of the most gripping investigative books of the year - my mind reels at who will play Glover in the inevitable movie adaptation
—— Zach Sokol , Vice UKAn exhaustive and entertaining account of how digital music piracy started, what effect it had on the industry and who was involved
—— Andrew Williams , MetroJaundiced, whip-smart, superbly reported and indispensable
—— Louis Bayard , Guardian WeeklyBrilliant… Witt's account is every bit as riveting as a thriller… Required reading for anybody interested in how we came to consume music today
—— John Meagher , Irish IndependentIt’s a truly terrific read. Thoughtful, compelling, action-packed (surprisingly), utterly robust and guaranteed to be one of those nonfictions you rip through as if it was a novel by your favourite author
—— BookmunchExcellent
—— Sonny Bunch , Miami HeraldA terrific tale of music piracy at the dawn of the digital era
—— Helen Brown , Daily TelegraphThe collapse of the music industry, thanks to the emergence of the internet and illegal downloading, is told here with all the urgency and colour of a thriller
—— Louis Wise , Sunday TimesWitt tells the captivating and tense story of how the digital music revolution transformed the music industry, and made criminals out of many of us. Read it to learn all about a landmark moment in music and technology that still affects us today.
—— Isaac Fitzgerald , BuzzfeedHis book is a tour de force, delving into the criminal underworld of hackers and pilferers as well as the complacent corporate boardroom
—— Lionel Barber , Financial TimesA must-read. It flows like a captivating novel.
—— Mohamed El Erian , The NationalA terrific book… Rich and fascinating.
—— Waitrose WeekendPage-turner about how piracy nearly destroyed the established music industry.
—— Andrew Hill , Financial TimesA great read.
—— DisruptsBrilliant.
—— Hugo Rifkind , The TimesWitt skillfully and thoroughly documents this “warez” scene of file sharers… Absolutely enthralling, and occasionally cinematic.
—— Jon Fine , Strategy + BusinessBeautifully told.
—— William Leith , Evening Standard