Book Review: “The Happiest Refugee” by Anh Do

I didn’t know and hear about Anh Do before this book. In fact, I don’t remember who recommended this book to me. Probably I was intrigued by the title and the fact that Asian comedian are rare. For an Asian guy to rise above the poverty of refugee life and become a standup comedian in Australia takes a lot of tenacity and guts.

The story started out in the present when Anh saw his ailing father after many years since his father abandoned the family and flashed back to Anh’s parents and how they met in Vietnam. His father’s gang drove the train police from harassing the illegal sales girl and how they fell in love and got married. There were a few stories how his hero father walked into a prison with a fake ID and escorted his brother-in-law out of the jail. Then it’s the final escape from Vietnam in a boat that made his father a true hero to everyone. The journey in the sea was treacherous – 2 encounters with pirates and near death experience floating in the ocean without food. The final encounter with a German ship whose captain hinted for them to destroy their boat allowed them to be rescued.

Upon arriving in Australia, the family got to work in sewing, and raising farm animals. They were doing just fine until the high interest rate of the 80’s forced a few of their investments to go bust. It didn’t help when their new farm contracted diseases that wiped them out. They were back to sewing clothing again. At this time, his father began to use alcohol to calm his nerve and became violent with his family due to the bad investments. The father split and the family was down to one breadwinner – his mother. It’s hard enough as is but the mother continued to support his kids through private school. How Anh hid the sad financial state from his school mates was both funny and degrading.

The true heroes are his father in the early stage of Anh’s life and then his mother later when his dad abandoned the family. The charity giving nature of his mother was incredible, even seemingly at the risk of jeopardizing her own family. But they always managed to receive many folds back.

Anh Do is a hard working funny guy, shaped by the rough near-death childhood in cycles of extreme poverty and reasonable living. Despite his many talents, he chose a very risky profession – comedian – for an Asian. Very courageous. Anh shared a lot of his personal life and struggles in this book. His stories are heart warming and mesmerizing. I even found a few of his YouTube videos: the Deal or No Deal game show and the Dancing with the Star clips, mentioned in the book. He’s a great model for Asians.

Book Review “My Father at 100” by Ron Reagan

A biography book written by Ron Reagan of Ronald Reagan, his father and the one of greatest Presidents of United States. Although I wouldn’t say I’m a big fan of Ronald Reagan but I must admit he did a lot of good during one of the lowest-sentiment period (1980 to 1988) of the United States, when a deep recession took hold of country. His perpetual optimism for the United States and its value are infectious.

The author, being the genealogist of the family, went to great details of the grand parents and parents of Ronald Reagan and his Irish root. Born to an alcoholic shoe-salesman father (Jack) and an ever optimistic mother (Nellie), Ron lived through cycles of poverty during the Great Depression and so-so time. His obsession with football and swimming paved the way to his broadcasting career. Being a lifeguard, Ronald Reagan rescued 77 people during his 3~4-year stint, helping to pay for his schooling at Eureka college. This was where he stroke the interest of public life when he gave a speech to an organized strike of students after a severe funding-related reduction of classes.

It’s interesting that the author remembered his dad mostly through sports related interaction – football, swimming, and etc – the macho stuff. Though Ron Reagan is a liberal, much to the dismay of his father, he remained a staunch supporter his dad throughout his Presidency. He described the funny story of how his dad remain calm and continued to discussed the history of their house with his soon-to-be daughter-in-law when their house was nearly burned down by the wild fire.

The tell-tale signs of his Alzheimer were already showing in the 2nd term of Ronald Reagan after surviving the assassination. Sadly, at the end the disease consumes this great man, leaving very little for him to reflect on.

The author did a great job of capturing the essence of Ronald Reagan, shaped by his difficult upbringing and influence of his mother. Of course, his drive to achieve and his communication/acting talents propelled him to be as best he could be – a great US President. A good book long on facts and stories and short on politics – very refreshing.

Book Review: “The Accidental Billionaires: The Founding of Facebook: A Tale of Sex, Money, Genius and Betrayal” by Ben Mezrich

This book is about the rise of Facebook founded by two Harvard students one with an extraordinary programming skill, Mark Zuckerberg and his business-savvy buddie Eduardo Saverin. The author painted a competitive Mark Zuckerberg, whose desire to win surpasses his need to please people. He blew off the Winklevoss Twins, who were nothing but winers and still unsatisfied after settling a lawsuit that got them $68 millions. It goes to tell you that how greedy people would get when they saw other people prospering from their supposedly “own” ideas. The truth is that ideas are dimes and dozens. It’s the execution that makes the difference. As far as the severing the tie with Eduardo, the early Facebook founder, Mark appeared to have betrayed his friend. But in this competitive scenery, I wouldn’t fault Mark or anyone to abandon a relationship when a relationship no longer keep pace with the growth of each other. In a sense, Mark outgrew the relationship and he needed a different person to get Facebook to the next stage. Sean Parker, the Napter guy, is an interesting character. With his help, Facebook was able to connect with VC so quickly so he got a small cut from his involvement. But he was eventually outgrown because of his reckless behavior.

The author appears to glamorize the geeks’ digital life of party and programming. This might be what’s needed to get a fast-growth internet company to the stratosphere. Honestly, this is probably something that can be done when you’re still young in your 20’s. You get burned out fast with that kind of lifestyle.

It’s amazing the VC’s were throwing money at any startup company with great potential like Facebook but they could be vicious to kick anyone like Sean Park who got in the way.

The rise of the internet company is simply incredible nowadays: from nothing to over $50B within less than 10 years for Facebook. Even Google took a little longer than that. After reading this book, I felt a sense of loss for not participating in any of the Internet fever including the semiconductor, dot com, and the recent social networking fever. I admire those people who took the plunge. You can get bruised along the way but the reward is awesome.

Most of the data seems to have come from the angles of Eduardo and Sean Parker. Overall, it’s a good read. The author threw in enough embellishment to keep the story interesting while informing the readers sufficiently well.

Book Review: “Cleopatra: A Life” by Stacy Schiff

This is an interesting book about the life of an Egyptian empress, the last one of the Egyptian Ptolemaic dynasty. Her name conjures up an image a seductive woman with power and wealth. I learned about the strange in-breeding and infighting of the Egyptian royal family. Also the author glamorizes her love affair with Julius Caesar and Mark Anthony and bearing children to both of them. She definitely possessed enough wits and courage to govern a country for over 20+ years and its most prosperous time. It’s hard to tell whether her affair with the two roman emperors were ones of true love or survival necessity but one must admire her diplomacy and ability to maintain peace with the big neighbor while managing prosperity in her own country. At the end, she committed suicide after Mark Anthony’s suicide, which follows the defeat by Octavian.

This book based the Cleopatra stories on several sources and came up with the “best” probable account. After more than 2000 years, Cleopatra remains one of the many figures that seem forever intriguing because she’s really one of a kind.

Book Review: “At Home: A Short History of Private Life” by Bill Bryson

Bill Bryson presented a short history of how each of the rooms in our home developed from the mid 19th century in the western world. It didn’t cover the “other” side of the world. There were many interesting and not-so-interesting stories, many of which seems to span wider than the original “home” theme. At times, I almost wanted to give up reading the rest of the book. But the boring parts were short enough to be passed over.

The story started from the old home originally built in 1851 by Rev. Thomas Marsham the author happened to visit. There was the story about rector (gets the big tithes) vs. vicar (gets the small tithes) and how they were so wealthy from collecting the tithes from the village people without having to do much other than providing some spiritual sermon or counsel. How the Crystal Palace came about – architected by a gardener, Paxton – and how elegant (covered in glass panel) and how inexpensively it was built (5M lb in today’s money.

He touched on the human history: Paleolithic to Mesolithic to Neolithic, to the Bronze ages. The history of archeology was covered. Childe one of the pioneer recognized the “Neolithic Revolution” – farming, irrigation, writing, architecture, government – civilization – a “global lightbulb” moment. Some of the history of human diets (like domesticated animals, corn, potatoes) were covered.

The Hall (where the house begins): The history of how Britons were invaded by the Angles, Saxon, and Jutes. Lots of smoke inside the Hall during to burning of wood inside until chimneys were invented.

The Kitchen: The history of foods like bread, alum, meats (transport of, with ice from Kennebec River), fruits and food preservation. The first cookbook The Book of Household Management was written by Mrs. Beeton.

The Scullery and Larder: Lots of servants were employed in those days. By 1851, 1/3 of all young women in London were servants, and another 1/3 was a prostitute. The life of a servants was pretty rough and long at times. Descriptions of their jobs were tedious. The comparison between Europeans’ servants and American’s slaves was drawn.

The Fuse Box: This chapter is about the history of lighting in the pre-electricity era: from rushlight, candles (tallow and wax), Argand lamp, whale oil lamp, kerosene lamp, rock oil lamp, gas lamp, and fat oil lamp, which often cause fires. Most people lived in the dim lighting without any concern before the invention of electricity and lightbulb. The poor/working class worked long hours while the rich kept gentler hours.

The Drawing Room: I don’t know what this have to with fertilization of the farm land. But the use of refresh crops appears to be a good decision.

The Dining Room: The discovery of well-balanced diet were so late, like scurvy due to lack of vitamin C, and beriberi due to deficiency of Vitamin B1. Salt, spices were the main reasons the explorers went out to the ocean. America had only 5 domesticated creatures: the turkey, duck, dog, bee and cochineal insect – no dairy products. Adding sugar to tea happened in the 18th century. In the 19th century, Britain got Chinese hooked on opium just to offset the trade imbalance of the tea import from China.

The Cellar: The building of the 363-mile Erie canal was mainly due to the use of a special cement – thanks to Canvass White’s research. The canal transformed New York into an export gateway. The use of wood, to bricks, to stones (Coade Stone), to iron (cast and wrought), to finally steel.

The passage: The building of Eiffel Tower and how he started out building the trusses and springs of the Statute of Liberty. Here the author introduced the history of the telephone invented by Bell. Thomas Watson was instrumental in the distinctive ringing bell and was given 10% shares of AT&T. He retired rich. Dreyfuss, early industrial designer, designed the upright phone with the handset on the cradle.

The Study: James Henry Atkinson invented the original mousetrap – Little Nipper – in 1899.

Some interesting factoids:
– The old churches seems have sunk below its court yard. It’s mostly due to the huge number of people being buried next to the church, which ran a profitable business of burying people.
– The weekdays: Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Fridays were named after Tiw, Woden, and Thor and Frig (first 3 being gods and the last being Woden’s wife).
– Thomas Jefferson invented French Fries and he’s practically a vegetarian.
– Human and guinea pigs are the only two within the animal kingdom that are unable to synthesize vitamin C in their own bodies.
– The indigenous Peru had 150 varieties of potato.
– American income tax wasn’t introduced until 1914. “People would never be this rich again.”
– One of Edison’s costly failures: concrete house built by pouring concrete into molds.
– It’s widely believed that a quarter of all fires that can’t otherwise be explained may be attributed to rats chewing on wires. Rats have sex up to twenty times a day.
– Plagues are spread by rats’ flees as plague kills rats as energetically as it kills us and other animals.

Movie Review: “Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps”

This is a continuation of the Wall Street filmed in 1987 starring Michael Douglas and Charlie Shean. This time Gordon Gekko came out of jail after serving 8 years in prison. His freedom happened to coincide with the subprime mortgage financial crisis of the 2008. Is he going to be a re-educated good guy and good father to his daughter and future son-in-law? Not quite.

Jake is this savvy stock analyst on the alternative energy sector, advising clients of the potential of laser fusion energy generator. First he got a $1.4M bonus check from his investment banker, Zabel, just days before his company went bankrupt by the subprime mortgage disaster. This story plot appears to be similar to the fate of Shearson Lehman Brother. The founder, Zabel, committed suicide in the subway station.

As it turned out Jake happened to be dating Gordon Gekko’s daughter, who refused to reconcile with her dad because of the damage he’s done to the family, especially his brother’s death. Through the financial crisis, Jake lost his job at Zabel and went to work for Bretton, the arch-enemy of Zabel. After he got doubled crossed by Bretton. He decided to leverage the $100M trust fund that Gordon left/hid-away at Swiss to his daughter. Gordon double crossed him and used to money to build up a $1.1B fund. And of course, the bad guy, Bretton, met his disgraced fate at his company. All was well when Gordon showed up with the $100M to make good on his original promise and they lived happily ever after with the upcoming grandson.

The story line and details of the financial crisis matched pretty well with the 2008 subprime mortgage disaster that I’m aware of, especially on how the Fed (Ben Benanke) and Treasurer (Paul Samuelson) orchestrated the demise of the Lehman Brothers but rescued the rest of the investment bankers. So the plot was realistic enough. But this Jake character wasn’t very strong and didn’t come across as the big shot Wall Street analyst. The rest of the characters weren’t very strong nor believable. But the movie captured the greed and state of the 2008 crisis. So it’s a good enough movie to watch.

Movie Review: “Thor”

Watched “Thor” at an AMC movie theater yesterday in 3D and iMax. The plot was simple but tt was a pretty good experience: lots of actions, special effects, and feeling good at the end. Never knew much of the story of Thor and the related mythology. This movie was a pretty good adaptation of the story, which goes like this:

Thor was exiled by his own father, the king, to earth to be tamed and learn modesty for the kingship after taking on the arch-enemy of their people unilaterally. During his short stay on earth, he fell in love with the researcher. When he finally learned about modesty from not being able to lift the hammer (not sure if this is a real good test for modesty) and learned about leadership from getting in front of the people being victimized by the laser-shooting robots sent by his own brother. Finally, when he proved himself worthy of the kingship, he “attracted” the hammer, resurrected, beat back the enemy and save his own kingdom from being destroyed by his conniving brother. At the end, he lost the bridge to come back to earth to re-unit with his lover. Well, that’s the bridge for Thor II, coming to a theater near you in another year or so.

Learn by Blogging (and Sharing) – Derek Tsai's Personal Blog