Mr. Darcy would, I think, have considered our current century vulgar in its devotion to disruption. Too much noise. Too much jargon. Too many men in expensive shoes using the word pivot. And yet, I suspect he would have read Roger Spitz’s Disrupt with Impact with great interest.

Why? Because beneath the modern vocabulary sits an older problem: how does one preserve judgment when the world grows unstable? Spitz’s answer is not melodramatic. It is measured, practical, and more disciplined than the average business sermon. That alone would have earned Darcy’s reluctant respect.

There is also something satisfying in a book that refuses to confuse activity with wisdom. Disrupt with Impact argues for anticipation, agility, and resilience, yes, but it does not ask the reader to become theatrical about uncertainty. It asks for steadier thought. That is a quality I admire wherever I find it.

So no, this is not a Regency novel. But it does understand character under pressure, and that counts for something.

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