//
BOOK REVIEWS
Writer’s Digest | 11th Annual International
Self-Published Book Awards
“Stack the Logs,” the title is intriguing. The reader
immediately wants to know what the analogy means. Mr. Lunn does an
excellent job of organizing this material so that it is readable,
sensible and very practical. An individual who desires to understand
how to reach their career dreams or personal dreams can benefit by
the direction offered in this book.
What impressed me about this award winning book, (in my opinion),
is the structure of the book, the style of writing, and its format.
The author doesn’t hesitate to tackle key personal issues that block
people from success. Those included fear, attitudes, especially the
deadly one – procrastination. A particular list was insightful to me
as I read through this book- the tools to win over procrastination.

Midwest Book Reveiw
Stack The Logs: Building A Success Framework To Reach Your Dreams by entrepreneur and marketing expert Frank F. Lunn is a straightforward self-help guide for members of the business community in their dealings with adversity by making their life choices one at a time. From learning to keep tight control over one's fear; to accurately defining success for oneself; to tips for dealing with disappointment and laying firm plans, Stack The Logs offers solid, accessible, rational, effective guidelines which are directly applicable to both business concerns and personal life issues.

New Pages.com
Lunn has realized that success, whatever your definition, is an
accumulation over time rather than a single event. It is about
incremental achievement. Lunn realized there were seven essential
components to success: (1) plan well, (2) keep an excellent forward
thrust to objectives, (3) deal with disappointments and setbacks,
(4) create a positive support structure, (5) stay positive and
focused, (6) maintain moral character, and (7) keep on "Stacking The
Logs!" Divided into twenty chapters, this powerful text expands on
these basic principles, including planning for guaranteed success,
and the power of Applied Incremental Advantage, which Lunn calls the
"compound interest of success." It also tells the number one reason
people fail, and how to overcome it, as well as programming yourself
to become a champion with the techniques used by Olympic athletes
and astronauts. Additionally, the book details the history of St.
Jude Children's Research Hospital, where his son, Frankie Lunn, was
treated for leukemia. Lunn credits his "new family at St. Jude" for
teaching him the gift of optimism in the face of adversity and how
to weather personal storms and come back stronger.
|