I read this book as a kid back when Hughes was still someone people cared about. My dad read it and passed it on to me. It is funny but sad. It is a testament that great genius can also lead to great self destruction if not directed.
A very funny inside look at some of the peculiar habits of Howard Hughes apparently after one of his nervous breakdowns and the bizarre inner workings of his empire..
One of the weird little paperbacks I picked up at the big used bookstore I worked at 20 years ago. A fun read, especially if you've ever had a terrible boss, because you've never had a boss this bad, this rich, and this powerful. Thank your lucky stars.
It was interesting to learn what it was like to work with HH, but it was not great writing. It was slow going, but I enjoyed the perspective. How do you stay in a job like this?
I just read this book in one three-hour sitting. Compulsively readable and very funny, it's a very different look at Howard Hughes than you get in the more clinical biographies. Here is Hughes as the naked, unkempt, bone-thin shut-in, eating only Hershey bars and mindlessly stacking boxes of Kleenexes in a darkened screening room. Ron Kistler is the goofball who works his way up from an overnight job keeping watch over one of Hughes' junked airplanes to be the guy whose job it is to keep Hughes company around-the-clock in his cluttered bungalow at the Beverly Hills Hotel. While it's far too light on historical context to be a standalone biography, this is a great companion piece to the Brown and Broeske bio and definitely a worthwhile read for anyone who's fascinated by one of the most bizarre characters in the American popular imagination.
If you happen to have chance to read this rare book, do so. The author gives amazing glimpse of what it was like to personally work for the mystery man and what his quirks were really like. The accounts that take place are weird and funny at times. It is also sad that he spent so much time isolated from the world just sitting and watching movies or just sitting. Its a quick and short read but very interesting.
I found it necessary to dispose of a house fly last night. I remembered learning the technique from this book (With a tissue in each hand, attack from two different fronts). Its one of the books I donated to the library after I was finished, so it didn't make it to my "read" shelf until now. The book tells what its like to be a flunky for an extremely eccentric millionaire.