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On a Clear Day You Can See General Motors

By: J. Patrick Wright
ISBN 0-9603562-0-7

As the book cover states, this is a look inside General Motors from John De Lorean's perspective.  

From the Back Cover:

"LONG-AWAITED LOOK INSIDE GM.
Provides rare perspective about the imperfect workings of a giant corporation." - The Wall Street Journal

"PIZZAZZ AND SCOOPS TO SPARE.
A genuine muckraker the likes of which we haven't seen in years." - Village Voice

"DAMNING. 
There is much in the book that is illuminating and even frightening about America's largest Corporation." - Saturday Review

"CONTROVERSIAL.
The talk of the closely knit automobile industry." - The New York Times

"RIVETING.
A rare look into the bowels of a major corporation." - Chicago Sun-Times

REVEALING.
Does a fine job of detailing how GM remains a world power in spite of itself." - Chicago Tribune

"DAMAGING.
De Lorean is a legend in Detroit." - The Washington Post

"KISS-AND-TELL.
Entertaining and surely controversial." - Time Magazine

DEVASTATING.
One of the most absorbing books ever written on American business." - The Denver Post

"ROASTS GM BRASS.
It's selling faster than cars." - The Detroit News

From the book cover flaps:

During his 17 year career at General Motors, John De
Lorean was one of the automotive industry's most
controversial figures, and also one of it's most talented
and successful executives. So his resignation from GM in
April, 1973 shocked the business community.  When word
leaked out that he was writing a book about life at
General Motors, with journalist J. Patrick Wright, GM
and the auto industry anxiously awaited it's arrival. 
    But in a jolting  new move, De Lorean refused to let the
book be published saying he feared the reprisals from
GM would sink his attempts to launch a new car com-
pany. He continued to block publication of On A Clear
Day You Can See General Motors
for four years.
    Now in an unprecedented move this edition is being
published without the cooperation of John De Lorean,
General Motors, or the original publisher.
    Nevertheless, because of his critical position in top
management, De Lorean's disclosures of the inside
workings of General Motors are nothing short of
shocking. His highly critical assessment will blow the lid
off some of Detroit's most closely held secrets such as
 - Horrendous product decisions - The ill-fated
Corvair's questionable safety was well documented and
debated inside GM long before its introduction.
 - Sinister business practices - GM executives were
regularly dunned for substantial and possible illegal
political campaign contributions.
 - Serious management blunders - hundreds of
millions of dollars were wasted annually in capricious
executive decisions which would have ruined smaller
companies, but were easily absorbed by GM's vast
enterprise.
    John De Lorean's story is more than an expose',
however. It is a personal account of one modern
executive's struggle with big business management.
    As the antithesis of the traditional, stodgy, dark-suited
GM executive, De Lorean operated with flare and
panache. He openly criticized his company and his
industry when he felt they deserved it. He avoided the
corporate social scene in favor of a cadre of friends that
included professional athletes and movie stars. And he
dated models and actresses who were often younger than
the daughters of his fellow executives.
    While his life style chafed his superiors, his ex-
ceptional talents as an engineer and a crack executive,
produced business success after success, and filled GM's,

(Continued on back flap)

coffers with profit. By age 47, his meteoric rise had
placed De Lorean in a key management post, earning
over half-a-million dollars a year, with an even-odds
chance of becoming president of the industrial giant.
    But life at the top was a disappointment. De Lorean
found his job on executive row to be boring. Moreover,
he began to question GM's management system which
he felt often promoted mediocrity, sometimes produced
illegal and immoral business practices, and stressed
personal loyalties to the detriment of the corporation.
His efforts to push for change from within were fruitless.
    To these frustrations was added the startling
revelation that resentments inside GM had been formed
into a campaign to destroy him. So he quit.
    It is, therefore, from the privileged perspective of an
ex-GM executive, that De Lorean reveals General Motors
to be something quite different than a well-run
precisely managed corporation that is its public image
today.
    At a time when Americans are demanding more
reliability from American business, On A Clear Day You
Can See General Motors
demonstrates how one cor-
porate leviathan grew less accountable to its many
publics amid booming sales and dwindling competition.
And it is this disclosure that makes this book an im-
portant document for citizens, politicians and busi-
nessmen.
J. Patrick Wright, age 38, had covered the automotive
industry for 13 years primarily from the outpost of
Detroit Bureau Chief for Business Week Magazine. He
has twice won the Detroit Press Club award for
distinguished business reporting, and has also written
for the Atlantic Monthly, The Los Angeles Times, The
Washington Post, and numerous business publications.
Wright left Business Week in 1978 to publish this book.
He currently is a free lance writer, and working on two
other books.
Jacket Design by Irene Friedman
Distributed by Carolina House
 

This page last modified on Tuesday, April 08, 2008