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Hardcover Medicine, Science, and Merck Book

ISBN: 0521662958

ISBN13: 9780521662956

Medicine, Science, and Merck

In Medicine, Science, and Merck, the authors trace the careers of a son of Greek immigrants as he mastered three professions and ultimately became the Chief Executive Officer of America's most admired corporation - the multinational, pharmaceutical giant, Merck and Co., Inc. As the authors show, there was hope even for a wise-cracking kid living through the hard times of the 1930s. Education brought out the scholar in Roy Vagelos, who left his family's...

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: New

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Customer Reviews

4 ratings

A Good Read!

Roy Vagelos lived a rags-to-riches dream. He culminated his career as CEO of Merck, a giant company whose employees used to take lunch breaks at the store where he swept the floors as a boy. This is an inspiring tale, but not directly instructive. The author offers no tips for doctors, scientists or executives, nor does he address most of the current hot-button issues facing pharmaceutical companies. Vagelos simply, matter-of-factly presents the story of one man's life and achievements, without preaching or teaching. He does offer insights into scientific research (maybe too many, but this is his passion), into competitive hiring and into his management approach. His discussion of Merck's public health initiatives provides a much-needed counterpoint to the bad press the pharmaceutical industry has received in recent years. We suggest this book to those interested in Merck's history, in the pharmaceutical industry, in biochemistry or in a perfect example of an American immigrant's rise to success.

Why I enjoyed this book.

This book was referred to me by the CEO of a successful biotech company. I read it because P. Roy Vagelos, as CEO of Merck, had helped make Merck a great company - Merck won numerous awards during his tenure as CEO. He also shows incredible leadership by taking a unconventional business model by donating Merck's Ivemec into perpetuity, to eradicate River Blindness in Africa. He was a recipient of the Franklin Institute's Bower Award for this achievement - other recipients include William Rutter (Biotechnology/Chiron)Robert Galvin (Quality/Motorola)David Packard (Innovation/HP)George Rathmann (Biotechnology/Amgen)However, I enjoyed the book most because the book was about how, through hard work in three distinctly different careers, he had evolved into the person he is.A must read for anyone in Pharma or an immigrant !

science as a career

This is both a personal and a scientific autobiography/biography, beautifully done. A good read, with the science and corporate life understandable to the nonscientific reader. An action-packed adventure of an individual, a close-knit Greek-American family, and the pursuit of science -- at NIH, in Paris, at Washington University, and at Merck. The book provides an invaluable window into the scientific process as a human undertaking, warts and all. Good for young people thinking about science and/or corporate careers, as well as adding a needed perspective to the history of science through its nuanced account of research within the pharmaceutical industry.

medical science in business/American dream

Don't listen to any reviewers who tell you that they were disappointed not to have more about Roy Vagelos' "inner life" or "emotional life." Vagelos has had two stories to tell - one about the growth and development of medical science in business and the other implicitly about the dream of the ethnic American realized - and these stories are social, national and intellectual rather than "personal" in nature. The most exciting aspect of the book for me comes when he makes the leap from science to management - the final two steps up at Merck. As a reader, I like the Roy Vagelos who keeps to his personal style (seeing people face to face, visiting them where they work, solving problems through individuals rather than concepts, etc.) and who is willing to admit the limitations of that style (though, happily, they are few). This creates a sense of trust and believability (I mean in the writer-reader relationship), which is turn keeps us turning pages in what is otherwise a modest book.
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