Books
What It Takes
A memoir of building, negotiating, and compounding judgment in rooms where scale and stakes keep rising.
Schwarzman writes about building Blackstone, but the sneaky lesson is how much preparation sits underneath rooms that look effortless from the outside. Big outcomes always seem smoother from the cheap seats.
What stayed with me
What stayed was the role of preparation. Again and again, the book shows that strong decisions are rarely improvised miracles. They are usually built on obsessive context, memory, and pattern recognition.
What it changed
It changed how I think about ambition. Ambition in this book is less about loud self-belief and more about endurance, calibration, and the willingness to keep learning in public without looking casual about the stakes.
Why I still keep it on the shelf
I still think of it as a book about scale with the glamour stripped away. At its best, it shows how much serious work sits beneath decisive-looking outcomes.