Praise for The Storm

The Storm achieves something remarkable, managing to tell a painfully disturbing story that ultimately offers an inspiring message of hope. With storytelling bravado, Christopher Zyda demonstrates the virtue of English majors becoming great financial executives, as he takes us on a very dark journey that illuminates the worst and best of the human condition. We witness homophobia on full, vicious display, and we also meet people who stepped up to do the right thing, as I was very pleased to learn was the case with so many of Chris’ colleagues at Disney. This memoir is as important as it is riveting, since it delivers a powerful firsthand perspective on what it was like to be gay in America before and during the storm of AIDS, as well as the devastating toll the epidemic took not just on those who were struck down, but on those who survived.

Michael D. Eisner, former Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of The Walt Disney Company

Christopher Zyda has the soul of an artist and the razor-sharp mind of a senior corporate executive.  He brings these two qualities together to make The Storm a singular, exciting, and very intimate memoir.  This is a look at the AIDS crisis and prejudice through a unique point of view—that of a senior executive at one of America’s largest and most important corporations, The Walt Disney Company.  At the same time, it is a deeply personal, human, and revelatory look at coming of age in a very different America.  Chris has written a book that is both devastating and harrowing, but at the same time joyous, optimistic and hopeful.  This is the essence of great literature, and The Storm is an important and very moving memoir.

Peter Chernin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of The Chernin Group, and former President and Chief Operating Officer of News Corporation

In my career, I’ve been involved with a number of action movies.  Well, you might say that The Storm is an action memoir!  Christopher Zyda’s epic account of the AIDS crisis is not only incredibly moving, but it moves!  This page-turner is emotional, suspenseful, dramatic, and has as many surprising plot twists as the best blockbusters.  Because it is a memoir, it is intensely personal and affecting.  At the same time, Zyda tells his tale on a vast canvas that encompasses all that was going on in America during that era, giving the book a remarkably epic feel.  Most of all, I was deeply touched by this riveting story of suffering and loss, redemption, and ultimate triumph.

Lawrence Gordon, producer of numerous blockbuster films including Die Hard, 48 Hours, and Field of Dreams, and former President and Chief Operating Officer of 20th Century Fox

Christopher Zyda’s compelling memoir is a passion play.  He courageously reveals with wit and pathos, the enormous struggle he endured to evolve, against all odds, into a fully formed exceptional human being.  Chris’ “coming of age” in the period of AIDS hysteria brings to light a remarkable triumph of the human spirit.  He suffered the agony of self-doubt, the loss of a great love, the pain of abandonment, and the cruelty of ignorant and mean-spirited people.  Instead of giving into cynicism, he fought for his life and plumbed his natural gifts of intellect, compassion, toughness, and morality to prevent the dark side from winning.  Victorious in many of his principled battles, it was ultimately through Chris’ practice of forgiveness that he transformed himself and countless others.  He proclaims that we must “accept responsibility to save ourselves.”  In seizing a carpe diem mindset—he does just that.  He is one of the “better angels of our nature.

Elaine P. Wynn, co-founder of Wynn Resorts and Mirage Resorts