Publisher's Weekly Review
Levy, a former Silicon Valley attorney, recounts becoming a confidant of the late Steve Jobs in this engaging memoir. When Levy arrived at Pixar (where Jobs served as chairman) as chief financial officer in February 1995, it was a small but brilliant firm on the edge of failure, not for lack of talent-this was the creative team that had developed the cutting-edge animation behind the still-unreleased Toy Story-but from a lack of business savvy and a deep distrust of Jobs. By believing in Pixar's future and its people, Levy explains, he and Jobs turned the tide for the struggling company, despite its deeply disadvantageous deal with Disney. The solution, Jobs and Levy realized, was an IPO to garner Pixar more capital. After Pixar's value skyrocketed to $1.46 billion on its first day of trading and Toy Story became an unexpected success, Pixar could finally renegotiate its deal with Disney, acquiring more creative control and a larger share of the profits. A wildly successful slate of films followed, ultimately leading to the 2006 sale of Pixar to Disney for $7.6 billion. Levy has written a fascinating look at one of the most innovative companies of the early 21st century. Agent: David McCormick, McCormick Literary. (Nov.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Review
Pixars former chief financial officer turns in an insiders account of one of the worlds most influential digital media companies.Steve Jobs had made and lost a fortune by the time Levy showed up, having founded and then been ejected from Apple and gone to NeXT. In 1994, his new Pixar digital film company had chewed its way through $50 million of Jobs money with little to show for it. In part thanks to Levys legal skills and analytical powers, Jobs turned that around to become one of the wealthiest people in the world, controlling billions of dollars. The authors account of his dozen years with Jobs follows an unsurprising, almost by-the-numbers trajectory: new guy comes to embattled company, helps company face and then overcome challenges, and finds himself wealthy and powerful but unfulfilledwith the twist that, instead of becoming a celebrity chef or an around-the-world adventurer, Levy winds up a student and then teacher of Tibetan Buddhism. In between the cut-to-standard scaffolding, though, Levys account offers some pleasant moments and insights, including anecdotes on how Toy Story came into being pixel by pixel, a process that helped lure Levy into the company to begin with. (How do I know Im not simply falling for the allure of a high-tech company making a film? he asked a mentor, to which the response, in so many words, was, Dont be a schmuck and go for it.) No mere technocrat, Levy is also good on the details of digital filmmaking, as when he writes of the considerable difficulties involved in rendering skin so that it doesnt look like painted rubber: These are nuances we never think about, he observes, but they are glaringly obvious when they are missing. Thats just so, and theres not much missing herealthough there isnt much in the way of news about Jobs himself, the star of the show. A footnote to Walter Isaacsons Steve Jobs, but not a minor one. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Like the best of stories, this business memoir has a hero (actually, many); an antagonist (again, many, varying at periods during the telling); a climax; and a denouement other than Steve Jobs' passing. Often, the nuances are slight such as whether or not Disney is truly a villain or a savior when it eventually acquires Pixar. Or if the late Jobs truly understood all the ins and outs of running an incredibly creative studio. Written by former CFO and Pixar board member Levy, it's an engaging narrative of the company's success, from a possible platform of failure, that simplifies the often very complicated explanations of IPOs, Hollywood accounting, and contract negotiations (to name just a few), all important to the results and the happily-ever-after ending. Readers meet, warts and all, some of the major players who becomes very real, whether it's powerhouse attorney Larry Sonsini or the titans at Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs. This is an interesting, in-depth look at a technology-entertainment unicorn.--Jacobs, Barbara Copyright 2016 Booklist