Joyce Meyer is probably better equipped than anyone when it
comes to never giving up. She overcame an abused childhood,
a bad marriage and extremely limited opportunities to
become one of the most popular author/speakers in the
world. JoyceMeyerMinistries was the first ministry in
America to be headed by a woman, and it's one of the
largest in the world. If anyone knows how to hold on to a
dream and realize it, it's her. Packed with examples of
people who pursued their goals relentlessly, the book
profiles nearly fifty individuals who prevailed against all
odds. From the builder of the Brooklyn Bridge to the
chemists who invented Post-It notes we meet people like
Bessie Coleman, an African-American who had to go to flight
school in Paris in order to learn how to fly. But she did,
becoming the first woman in America to earn her pilot's
license in 1920.