Book Review: Fail Up: 20 Lessons on Building Success from Failure
by Tavis Smiley
Publication Date: Feb 05, 2013
List Price: $14.95
Format: Paperback, 263 pages
Classification: Nonfiction
ISBN13: 9781401933913
Imprint: SmileyBooks
Publisher: Hay House
Parent Company: Hay House
Read a Description of Fail Up: 20 Lessons on Building Success from Failure
Book Reviewed by Kam Williams
"If they’re being honest, most people who have ever succeeded in any human endeavor will tell you they learned more from their failures than they ever learned from their successes… Failure is an inevitable part of the human condition… Through my scars, I have been blessed to arrive at a place I never imagined. .
When you take the time to learn your lessons, when you use
those lessons as stepping-stones to climb even higher than you were before,
you transcend failure—you ‘fail up.’ In this book, I detail 20 of the most
impactful lessons of my life…I’m a witness. You CAN fail up!"
—Excerpted from the Introduction (pgs. ix-xvii)
Given Tavis Smiley’s lofty status as the host of a hit,
nationally-syndicated, TV talk show, one might not suspect that he’d
suffered any setbacks over the course of his meteoric rise. But contrary to
appearances, the accomplished broadcaster, entrepreneur, publisher,
philanthropist and author has definitely taken his share of missteps on his
way to the top.
And now he’s decided to mark his 20th anniversary in the business by writing
a how-to, or should I say a how not-to book recounting 20 of the biggest
blunders he’s made in life. The point of the revealing exercise is
ostensibly to give hope to the downtrodden and discouraged by illustrating
how much more we can potentially learn from our mistakes than from our
successes.
In this warts-and-all memoir, Tavis owns up to a number of embarrassing
doozies, ranging from getting arrested for writing bad checks to padding his
timesheets at a job to graduating 15 years late from college because he
flunked a course the second semester of his senior year. He also admits to
mooching off former NFL great Jim Brown when he first arrived in Los Angeles
and to almost moving back home to Indiana dead broke when, as Gladys Knight
sings it, "L.A. proved too much for the man."
What I found most fascinating, nevertheless, is hearing Tavis expound on
some of his more public falls from grace, such as being fired by BET
Chairman Bob Johnson, being called a "House [N-word]" by hip-hop mogul
Russell Simmons and, perhaps most painfully, being rejected by much of the
black community for his failure to embrace Barack Obama during the 2008
presidential race.
He addresses the Obama controversy in heartfelt fashion in a chapter
entitled, "When Everybody Turns against You." There he reflects upon the
tears spilt after being thrown under the campaign bus by fans and colleagues
alike, including radio DJ Tom Joyner, a longtime-friend and colleague who
all but predicted his professional demise.
But to his credit, Tavis has not only survived but flourished mightily. In
fact, the brother proves himself here to be humble enough to air his
most-humiliating faux pas so they might serve as cautionary tales for anyone
contemplating following in his footsteps.