A chronicle of the efforts of America's ninth largest steel company to build a new steel plant in the Midwest's Rust Belt presents true-life characters and suspense in its exploration of the American steel industry
I read this book about 1992 and remember really enjoying it. So much so, that I scheduled a meeting and actually met with the focus of the book, Ken Iverson, not long afterwards.
Ken Iverson had been an entrepreneurial hero of mine for quite a while. He was a man who founded and expanded a steel business in the US at exactly the same time that the old, huge steel companies were losing money, contracting and laying off 100s of thousands of employees.
He ran a non-union shop in a union dominated industry. He paid average wages well ABOVE the union scale. His employees were not interested in forming unions. He paid on productivity, and his workers all contributed to increased productivity by design and by pay.
He opposed tariffs on steel, or any other product.
He opposed government subsidies for businesses.
He was true to his principles. He hired thousands, and most loved him. I saved and am looking at now a full page Wall St. Journal tribute to him from 17 April 2002, shortly after he died. Many tributes were included, but the following one reads: "He was our leader, our inspiration, and our friend. Nucor's 8,400 employees are saddened by his passing, but committed to his principals (sp). The results of his efforts live on at Nucor, and will serve as our compass in the years ahead. NUCOR"
This book is about him and his work as a "hot steel man" creating Nucor, a fantastic tale of greatness.
24 Aug. 2019 - I am very sorry to have to edit this review to say that it has become clear that the management that followed Ken Iverson at Nucor did NOT follow his principles at all. They have been thick as thieves in working with the Trump administration to impose steel tariffs on the American public. In addition to (or because of?) that, the company has become far less productive and less profitable than in the Iverson days. So sad. Violating their pledge to stay committed to Iverson's principles, is a keen demonstration of the folly of dishonesty and supporting tariffs!
Richard Preston always delivers for me. I had read this book many years ago, and thought it was time for a refresh. Preston basically does a tour de Rust Belt, making Big Steel the enemy and setting up Nucor as our anti-union, risk-taking, pure hustle heroes. While I do tire of the narrative by the end of the book, Preston writes in such a present active way, that you feel the heat coming off the arc melters, and you get a twinge of a headache after a description of the all-night bachelor parties at the local watering hole. This drives the narrative, and makes this book still worth the read, even after a quick check of the Nucor website reveals that they currently have 9 Executive Vice-Presidents.
"A failure is a particularly dangerous time for a company, and must be handled with great skill. If people at higher levels come down on an employee and say, 'You goofed up,' it can kill all initiative at a company."
"So how do you handle someone who does goof?" I asked.
Aycock [a senior officer of Nucor] put his hands flat on his desk and eyed me in a way that suggested he thought I was an idiot. "You give him something new to do!" he said in a fla...[see the rest on my book review site.]
Very fun read that provides excellent insight into the challenges faced by Nucor in its attempts to disrupt the US Steel Industry during the 1980s and 1990s.
Worth reading by anyone interested in the messy process of disrupting a physical (as opposed to digital) industry. Characters are presented in full color, and the story is as hot as the liquid steel the narrative focuses on.
I read this book many years ago. What could have been a boring book about industry read like a suspense novel. It impacted me so much that I found myself choosing this company as a report in a college finance class. Nucor was the first stock I ever purchased because of this book. Nucor is regularly in the news and I'm constantly brought back to this book.
The book is well written and engaging as it tells the story of how a steel company built a revolutionary new manufacturing plant in the middle of an Indiana cornfield. The narrative style is compelling and immediate, using a novelist's flair to make the people and events come alive. You really do come to care about the company and its David vs. Goliath quest to best the giants of the world steel industry at their own game.
However, it feels a little thin. There are long sections which are spent talking about the history of the company, different products it made over the past 100 years, and the biographical details of the various men who ran it, or who nearly ran it into the ground. These are engaging in their own way, but they make the book feel like a long magazine article that has been fleshed out to book length.
There's quite a bit of technical information on steel making, as you might expect. It's all discussed in layman's terms, which makes it accessible, but even for someone interested in the subject, it's a bit esoteric.
Wonderful look at the modern steel industry (as of the 1990s) by a writer not normally known for his industrial writing ... Preston is actually a scientific writer, who normally focuses on diseases and things like that, but turns out to be the perfect observer about the building of a new "mini-mill" in Indiana that threatens to directly compete with the large old-style steel mills in the Rust Belt. Very vivid descriptions, especially about the dangers of a mill, but also very strong personality sketches of the various real people who fill the book. Highly recommended.
Loved the beginning. Loved the end. But it dragged in the middle with unimportant details in the middle...about people, places, and processes that jumped around a lot from one to another.
I really enjoyed reading about the analysis of Nucor's culture and how they were able to be lean and compete with big steel and grow into a mature and profitable company. Iverson identified talent, set bold goals, and allowed them to do their job without much management. I would have loved to see in the book more about the business side, and less about bar room brawls.
American Steel is a comeback story of the American Steel Industry. Nucor Corporation has a wild idea about building a plant in tiny Crawfordsville, Indiana, and beat Big Steel and Japan at the same time with non-union labor. They pulled off one of the greatest stories in industrial America. Though the writing style is fairly simple the story itself is fabulous and I wouldn't believe it if I didn't know it was true.
This look at the steel industry was even more fascinating to me because I live in Indiana, where the steel mill is. No one could ever have persuaded me that a book about a mill could be interesting. I just read it because I know Preston to be an extraordinary non-fiction writer. Like a fiction writer, he provides a setting, characters, a great story line, and suspense.
A parable of the 1980s American industrial renaissance that reads like a suspense novel, this is the story of how Nucor built the world's lowest-cost steel mill in an Indiana cornfield. An out-of-print business classic from a John McPhee disciple, hence the writing is superb and the technical explanations are clear & captivating.
Preston is a master -- as good as any creative nonfiction writer out there. This book, when excerpted in the New Yorker, rightly drew massive buzz. My college roommate still gives copies to his investment banking staffers.
Excellent. I worked in proximity to steel makers, handlers, coilers, and slitters. I was impressed by what goes into building a new steel making facility. I was disappointed by the way the employees were portrayed.
Like any Richard Preston book, this book is strong in all senses and should be read by the older hand of life. However, for people like me, I can't resist...
An interesting topic, and an interesting read. The author seemed to take a balanced approach to the topic and the company, while showing the true nature of these steel people. Some words were used very oddly, such as "hydrologic." And he mentioned a "Buick Cutlass," which would either be an Oldsmobile, or a Buick something else. Its propulsion was mentioned as a "motor" instead of an engine. Overall this book is an interesting read about people with fortitude who take big risks and yet make things happen. It is America.