This is a fascinating and entertaining autobiography. From her beginnings working in merchandising for Penthouse magazine, and her entrepreneur days selling novelty toilet paper (seriously), to her jump to the film industry working as a script reader for Paramount, and then working her way up to becoming the first female president of a major film studio, Dawn Steel was definitely a trailblazer. It is unfortunate that she passed away at the age of 51 because I’m sure she would have done more great things. This book was published in 1993 and some things do feel a bit dated – she downplays the sexism in the film industry by suggesting that women just need to learn to work “like men” and she periodically throws out cheesy inspirational aphorisms on how to succeed in business, most of which felt cliché and a bit try-hard to me (the title is a good example of this). But overall, this was a really fun read.