Contact: Steven R. Porter For Immediate
Release – August 21, 2019
Stillwater River Publications
175 Main Street, Pawtucket, RI 02890
(401) 475-1979
info@StillwaterPress.com
http://www.StillwaterPress.com
Stillwater River Publications
175 Main Street, Pawtucket, RI 02890
(401) 475-1979
info@StillwaterPress.com
http://www.StillwaterPress.com
‘KID
NUMBER ONE’ DELIVERS IN-DEPTH BEHIND-THE-SCENES LOOK
AT ALAN HASSENFELD AND THE WORLD OF TOYS,
POLITICS, PHILANTHROPY, AND HASBRO
AT ALAN HASSENFELD AND THE WORLD OF TOYS,
POLITICS, PHILANTHROPY, AND HASBRO
PAWTUCKET, R.I. – Stillwater River Publications is
pleased to announce publication of G. Wayne Miller’s KID
NUMBER ONE: A story of heart, soul and business, featuring Alan Hassenfeld and
Hasbro, the long-awaited sequel (and prequel) to Miller’s best-selling “Toy
Wars: The epic struggle between G.I. Joe, Barbie and the companies that make
them.”
An exclusive tour-de-force deep inside the world of
toys, games, entertainment, Hollywood and national and local politics, KID NUMBER
ONE, scheduled for publication on Sept. 24, 2019, will appeal to general
readers and lovers of biography, history, business and philanthropy – and will
be an indispensable addition to the chronicling of American culture.
A book launch and signing with Miller and former
Hasbro CEOs Alan Hassenfeld and Al Verrecchia will be held from 3 p.m. to 5
p.m., Saturday, Sept. 28, 2019, at the Blackstone Valley Visitors Center, 175
Main St., downtown Pawtucket.
KID NUMBER ONE opens in 1903, when Alan Hassenfeld’s
grandfather and great-uncle arrived in America as penniless teenage immigrants
escaping religious persecution – refugees who went from hawking rags on the
streets of New York City to building what became the world’s largest toy
company, Hasbro, whose world headquarters is in Pawtucket.
Henry Hassenfeld, Alan’s grandfather, and Hillel
Hassenfeld, Alan’s great-uncle, found their way to Rhode Island and by 1917 had
founded Has(senfeld) bro(thers) on North Main Street in Providence. The company
grew, becoming a national force when Henry’s son Merrill, Alan’s father, brought
Mr. Potato Head and G.I. Joe to market. Merrill’s other son, Stephen, made
Hasbro a Fortune 500 company and Hollywood player. Brother Alan was the free
spirit who wanted to write novels, date beautiful women and travel the world.
He never wanted to run Hasbro, and no one ever believed he would – or could.
And then Stephen died, tragically of AIDS. “Kid Number One,” as Alan liked to call himself, was suddenly chairman and CEO. Silencing the skeptics, he took the company to greater heights – and then almost killed it with a series of bad decisions including Hasbro’s acquisition of rights to POKéMON. Putting ego aside, Hassenfeld gave his long-time lieutenant Al Verrecchia command and set in motion a plan whereby he would leave the corner office. Verrecchia saved the company, and after renewed success, he himself retired, leaving Hasbro in the hands of current CEO and chairman Brian Goldner, so highly regarded that he was brought onto the board of CBS.
And then Stephen died, tragically of AIDS. “Kid Number One,” as Alan liked to call himself, was suddenly chairman and CEO. Silencing the skeptics, he took the company to greater heights – and then almost killed it with a series of bad decisions including Hasbro’s acquisition of rights to POKéMON. Putting ego aside, Hassenfeld gave his long-time lieutenant Al Verrecchia command and set in motion a plan whereby he would leave the corner office. Verrecchia saved the company, and after renewed success, he himself retired, leaving Hasbro in the hands of current CEO and chairman Brian Goldner, so highly regarded that he was brought onto the board of CBS.
With his fortune, Hassenfeld could have sailed into
the sunset on a yacht, but instead, he went to work expanding the long family
tradition of Tikkun Olam – “repairing the world” – begun by his grandfather and
great-uncle, who, grateful to have survived, tirelessly helped immigrants and
needy citizens of their new country. Alan Hassenfeld’s philanthropy has helped
build two children’s hospitals, establish numerous educational and health
programs, train young doctors and scientists, resettle refugees, promote peace
in the Mideast and more. For decades, he also has been a highly visible
advocate for national political and ethics reform, despite personal threats and
the scorn of crooked politicians.
KID NUMBER ONE weaves these
stories into a seamless, dramatic narrative that begins with the slaughter of
Jews in 1903 Poland and continues to today -- when in an era of unchecked
narcissism and greed, Hassenfeld, like Bill Gates, serves as a model for what
people of great wealth can do when they put self aside.
KID NUMBER ONE also chronicles the history
of American toys -- and not just such Hasbro classics as Monopoly, Transformers
and Star Wars, but also Mattel’s timeless brands including Barbie and many
lesser-known toys by companies large and small, many no longer in existence.
-- Washington Post senior correspondent Kevin
Sullivan and author of the #1 New York Times bestseller “Hope: A Memoir
of Survival and Cleveland.”
“Kid Number One is a compulsively readable and
beautifully researched tour through one family’s impact on a world that has
impacted us all: the toy industry. This is a unique and fascinating book.”
-- Daniela Lamas, author of the best-selling “You
Can Stop Humming Now: A doctor’s stories of life, death and in between.”
“Combining family and corporate history, Kid Number
One reveals the deeply personal family story at the heart of Hasbro's corporate
identity. From family business to a cornerstone of American popular culture, G.
Wayne Miller's history sheds light on the family and the values at the heart of
one the globe's most recognizable brands.”
-- Julian C. Chambliss, historian, scholar and
author of “Assembling the Marvel Cinematic Universe: Essays on the Social,
Cultural and Geopolitical Domains.”
“Extensively researched, engaging collection of
stories that follow the fortunes of one immigrant family... This is not,
however, an unstinting eulogy - Miller unflinchingly discusses family strife
and decisions that nearly proved disastrous to the business, even as he
recounts the successes When we meet Alan Hassenfeld, we are shown the gentle
humor that infused his life and work…
“Yet this is more than a mere historical account of
one successful man, family, or company - it is also a set of stories that
forces us to examine our current attitudes toward immigration; indeed, in the
chapter ‘Reach for the Stars,’ Miller explicitly connects his retelling with
the politics of today - and this honest questioning, taken together with his
tenderly painted portrait of Alan Hassenfeld, a quiet, hard-working, ambitious
and yet socially conscious entrepreneur and philanthropist who embodied the
American Dream, will leave a lasting impression on the minds of readers.”
-- Padma Venkatraman, bestselling author of “The
Bridge Home” and other best-selling books.
“Originally
built upon the backbone of two immigrant brothers, take a journey with G. Wayne
Miller and learn what truly defines the HASBRO name: Hassenfeld, Ambition,
Success, Benevolence, Rhode Island, and Optimism. A must read for anyone who
values family, creativity, and making a difference!”
-- Dan
Klingensmith Jr., G.I. Joe historian and author of G.I. Joe books.
Read an excerpt from “Kid Number One”:
www.kidnumberone.com
About the Author:
This is G. Wayne Miller’s 17th
book. He is also a filmmaker, a podcaster, a Providence Journal staff writer, a visiting fellow at Salve Regina
University’s Pell Center for International Relations and Public Policy, and
co-host and co-producer of the Telly Award-winning weekly national PBS TV and
SiriusXM Satellite Radio show “Story in the Public Square.”
Miller was a member of The Providence
Journal team that was a finalist for the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for Public
Service for the newspaper’s coverage of The Station nightclub fire that killed
100, and he has been honored for his work more than 50 times. His fiction and
non-fiction books have won wide critical acclaim and been translated into
several languages. Visit Miller at www.gwaynemiller.com
KID NUMBER ONE: A story of heart, soul
and business, featuring Alan Hassenfeld and Hasbro
by G. Wayne Miller
Hardcover: $35.00
ISBN: 978-1-950339-20-4
Hardcover: $35.00
ISBN: 978-1-950339-20-4
Attachments:
cover image, author photo
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