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Fins by William Knoedelseder

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Fins

Harley Earl, the Rise of General Motors, and the Glory Days of Detroit

William Knoedelseder

HarperCollins · Print & ebook · September 18, 2018

Reading lane: Automobile Industry

The New York Times bestselling author of Bitter Brew chronicles the birth and rise to greatness of the American auto industry through the remarkable life of Harley Earl, an eccentric six-foot-five, stuttering visionary who dropped out of college and went on to invent the profession of automobile styling, thereby revolutionized the way cars were made, marketed, and even imagined.

At a Glance

Why This Clicks

Detroit Drive

A lively look at how style, power, and car culture braided together in Detroit.

Come here for

  • Detroit industry lore
  • design, ambition, and corporate muscle

Expect

  • cultural context with trade-floor specificity
  • steady historical narration, not gadget worship

Book Details

Authors
William Knoedelseder
Publisher
HarperCollins
Published
September 18, 2018
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Automobile Industry · Automotive History
Reading lane
Automobile Industry

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • American Art

  • Business Lives

  • Lives in History

  • Finance

Show all 8 publisher categories
  • Economics

  • Automobile Industry

  • How Transportation Works

  • The Americas History

About This Book

The New York Times bestselling author of Bitter Brew chronicles the birth and rise to greatness of the American auto industry through the remarkable life of Harley Earl, an eccentric six-foot-five, stuttering visionary who dropped out of college and went on to invent the profession of automobile styling, thereby revolutionized the way cars were made, marketed, and even imagined. Harleys Earl’s story qualifies as a bona fide American family saga. It began in the Michigan pine...

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The New York Times bestselling author of Bitter Brew chronicles the birth and rise to greatness of the American auto industry through the remarkable life of Harley Earl, an eccentric six-foot-five, stuttering visionary who dropped out of college and went on to invent the profession of automobile styling, thereby revolutionized the way cars were made, marketed, and even imagined. Harleys Earl’s story qualifies as a bona fide American family saga. It began in the Michigan pine forest in the years after the Civil War, traveled across the Great Plains on the wooden wheels of a covered wagon, and eventually settled in a dirt road village named Hollywood, California, where young Harley took the skills he learned working in his father’s carriage shop and applied them to designing sleek, racy-looking automobile bodies for the fast crowd in the burgeoning silent movie business. As the 1920s roared with the sound of mass manufacturing, Harley returned to Michigan, where, at GM’s invitation, he introduced art into the rigid mechanics of auto-making. Over the next thirty years, he functioned as a kind of combination Steve Jobs and Tom Ford of his time, redefining the form and function of the country’s premier product. His impact was profound. When he retired as GM’s VP of Styling in 1958, Detroit reigned as the manufacturing capitol of the world and General Motors ranked as the most successful company in the history of business. Knoedelseder tells the story in ways both large and small, weaving the history of the company with the history of Detroit and the Earl family as Fins examines the effect of the automobile on America’s economy, culture, and national psyche.

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