This was an interesting book on the rise and fall of Publisher's Clearing House by a man who spent thirty years on the inside. Publisher's Clearing House, who sold magazine subscriptions via a sweepstakes, was always something in the background of my life. I never thought about it and when it disappeared I never blinked. But it was still an interesting story. It was government interference, a lot of grandstanding politicians more interested in publicity than doing good, and the dishonest press who brought them down.
What really caught me off-guard was when the sweepstakes went away, and they used to be everywhere, was how many other industries suffered as well. At their high-point the sweeps were sending out millions of pieces of mail a week. As a result, a lot of magazines used the sweeps for subscriptions so many of them went bankrupt. Printers who printed all the packages and those little stamps you would slap on also went out of business. Additionally, all the postal service lost close to $200 million a year out of that fiasco.
It wasn't the best written book, but I enjoyed the anecdotes and stories of winners. For those who remember Publisher's Clearing House, you might want to take a look.