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, by Phil Vischer
Free Download , by Phil Vischer
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Product details
File Size: 706 KB
Print Length: 273 pages
Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1595551220
Simultaneous Device Usage: Up to 5 simultaneous devices, per publisher limits
Publisher: Thomas Nelson (February 3, 2008)
Publication Date: February 3, 2008
Sold by: HarperCollins Publishing
Language: English
ASIN: B006ZBR4V6
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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#136,768 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
There were many reasons for me not to read this book. I was told I would cry while reading it. Psh. I also have a pretty high bar for what I consider to be good writing, and after skimming the first 3 pages of this book, I wasn't sold. Also, being a diligent researcher, I looked the book up on Amazon and read the reviews. Eh, mixed. The consensus, however, was that the last third of the book was worth waiting for. This is also what was told to me by the person who recommended the book. So, even while in middle of reading another book, and because I needed a major distraction with an easy read, I decided to take a stab.Me, Myself & Bob is a memoir written by Phil Vischer. If you don't know who he is, you might've heard about his company, Big Idea. If that doesn't ring a bell, Bob the Tomato probably would. If that doesn't cut it, you should come out of the hole you've been living in and take a shower or something. When I say "his company," I really should say, "ex-company" since he is no longer the CEO of Big Idea, the workings behind things like VeggieTales, 3-2-1 Penguins, and the Larryboy shows (the latter are lesser-known.) He now runs Jellyfish Labs (there's a really good reason behind that silly-sounding name. You get there at the end of the book.)The first two-thirds of the book outlines the massive success of his company and the massive failure it became. I was pretty surprised--and impressed--by getting an insider's look (and take) on the world of animation at that time. The show was pretty impressive and I'll probably never look at another episode the same way. Vischer then outlines the agonizing process through which his dream was taken from his hands. He candidly shares his experiences and talks about instances where it seemed that God could've intervened to save the company, but didn't. He shares those times when prayer, good intentions, ministry, and talent couldn't save a company, or a dream, from dying.The last third of the book really is worth getting to. Especially if you've ever struggled with losing something--a dream... whether it be your dream job, your dream relationship, your dream ministry event. Especially if the dream explodes into a fantastic fireworks show that was completely and unnecessarily horrendous and hurtful to everyone and left you spiritually reeling not unlike a boxing knockout. ...Can you tell this was personal? I found myself nodding and realizing familiar territory, while at the same time being re-challenged and reawakened at the realization that I am not alone in this, and that God really, really does change lives.With all that said, the book is not without its faults. The prize at the bottom of the cereal box take a little bit of mucking. Vischer's style (he not only wrote most of VeggieTales' initial scripts, but was the voice of Bob the Tomato) is kind of like what you would expect from someone who wrote most of VeggieTales' scripts and was the voice of Bob the Tomato. He's a little scattered, not the best writer, and a little (ok, a lot) rambly. I suspect his editors gave up on trying to shut out his hopelessly cartoonish style of thinking (and speaking, and writing.) To be fair, I got used to it after chapter... fifteen, and it became a bit like a friend yammering about his life. I just sat back and listened (I tried to find this on audiobook, but it's not there.) And then you get a shot in the face by chapter twenty-one. Even the latter chapters wasn't the powerhouse I was expecting. Once I got there, I was starting to get a little nervous: is this what they were telling me to wait for? Uh-oh. But man. It pays off. If anything, it's the story of success from ashes: seeing redemption work from beginning to brutal end to glorious rebirth.Bottom line: Even if you've never experienced bewilderment at God dashing your most earnest of intentions, even if you've never had a dream of changing the world through ministry, even if you've worked it all out and are right with God... there's a lot this book has to offer. I don't particularly believe that his story must be our story, and that his experiences are templates that are applicable to others. But it's a story about how one man handled his grapplings with God, and as for me, his voice was something my soul was familiar with. Maybe it'll be the same for you. And ok, if you promise not to tell anyone, I did it. I cried.
Truly one of the best books I have read. As a computer scientist - early adopter like Phil, and just a little older, I really identified with him and his computer software that he mentions. However, this is a great book for my son, who wants to invent, create a business, and do big things. Great for inventor - creative people.How many business books are written by people who have failed? Tremendous lessons here, and about his unparalleled success too! Great for business people too.While Phil is a Christian, the book is not overtly so. You can't get saved from reading the book. But like Bob the Tomato, he is very genuine. And I think that both Christians and nonChristians alike can appreciate a soul's struggle with eternity and significance. Great for Christians, and great for nonChristians too.The details in the stories are helpful for those beginning and planning a career, and also the analysis of those events are helpful for those looking back on their career and life, and wondering, what was that about??Understanding our past, and dealing with it, sets us free for the future.There were so MANY hurts in his company the Big Idea. Yet he never resorts to angry finger pointing and hurtful words. The only people who get fired are left nameless, and he even defends them for doing what they were meant to do.
Can a desire to do great things for God ever lead you astray?I first heard Phil Vischer speak in the Fall of 2010 and was enthralled by his speech. At the time, I hadn't known anything about the events that forced him out of Big Idea. His main points stuck with me at the time, and while 8 years later many of the specifics had faded out of my memory, I still remembered his speech being memorable.And so of course, when I realized he'd written a book about the rise and fall of Big Idea, I knew I had to get it.Me, Myself, and Bob is like few other memoirs I've read. It's certainly engaging, funny, and informative. But it's unlike other memoirs because it's a story of failure, and in literary terms, it's basically a tragedy. Vischer pretty much spells this out in the first chapter. This isn't a memoir of success. It's a memoir detailing how Vischer had a colossal fall, lost his dream, and had to learn to pick up the pieces and figure out where he went wrong.The questions that Vischer asks in this book are not easy questions to answer: Why would God allow a company that seemed to be doing great things for Him to fail? Why wouldn't he reward acts of faith that were done for Him? Why would He allow injustice to take place within the court system? Vischer has clearly spent a lot of time thinking about this and probing different dimensions of this issue. As a result, the answers Vischer provides are deep, thought-provoking, but also splendidly simple in the way that Biblical truths tend to be.As someone who wants to do great things for God, whether in writing fiction or in helping other Christian writers, this memoir challenged me in my perspective and gave me a lot to think about. I read this book over only two days, and once I'd finished it, I put the book down and spent a good half hour thinking about what Vischer had to say. It isn't stuff you'll hear many other places: secular or Christian spheres alike. But it's true. And it's convicting. And it makes me remember again the importance of humility.Many people are happy to talk about their successes. Few people are willing to talk about their failures. Even fewer are able to pinpoint why they failed, where they went wrong, and how we can avoid falling into the same trap. Vischer lies squarely in this last camp. This is not a book I want to quickly forget.Rating: 4.5-5 Stars (Extremely Good).
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