History is written by the winners. It's the faithful servants, the insiders, the ones who stick around, who can adapt to almost any condition, that get to write the official histories. They publish the memoirs, park in the directors' spaces, put up the statues, form the new governments, wipe out the pockets of resistance, recruit the new starters, set the agendas and talk of the documentaries and retrospectives. Yet theirs - the official version - is never the whole story. The quitter's tale offers a far more compelling and often a more honest version of history. In The Last Goodbye, Matt Potter collects the sharpest, angriest, most hilarious messages of resignation throughout history, including those whose exits were a springboard to eventual success, such as Steve Jobs, George Orwell and Charlie Sheen. It's full of self-deception, bloody knives, betrayal, honour, disgrace, disgust, thwarted ambition and shattered hopes, and sometimes a wicked sting in the tail.
The Last Goodbye : A History of the World in Resignation Letters