I have read Gabler's book and really enjoyed it, although it depressed me in some ways. He reveals a side of Walt I had never seen. The book made Snow White and Disneyland out as the two high points of passion in Walt's career and the rest (until Disneyland and finally EPCOT) seemed like the result of trying to make cheaper films or survival. "Song of the South" (combining animation and live action to afford the animation) and "101 Dalmations" (xerox process) were done to afford the animation, not advance it. He could never go as far out as he did with Snow White and this depressed him, according to the book. "Pinocchio" was more elaborate, but the story never clicked, and it did not achieve the success it needed to have to sustain more films like that. That sealed the fate of growth. Growing up, I never saw any of those films in that way, just accepted them as pushing boundaries and loved them. I ran into Diane, his daughter at a gathering and she was very upset to hear that I liked Gabler's version, as to her it was a travesty. I guess the way her family life was portrayed and especially Lillian, was offensive to her. I told her that the book kind of demotivated me as an Imagineer (surprised her), it seemed that her Dad lost interest in innovation after Snow White and the animator's strike, but not until Disneyland and EPCOT, reignited his passionate for the work. He seemed burned out from trying to achieve quality and struggling to support the business all his life. She denied that and said he loved all those films, held my hand and tried to encourage me in a very sincere way. Very nice lady. I'm sure the Disney Family Museum in SF is a stern reply to all of that. Have not been there yet, but eventually will check it out.