Loy Machedo’s Book Review – How they Blew it by Jamie Oliver & Tony Goodwin
Who doesn’t want to be a billionaire?
Almost every person on the planet who has been introduced to the world of positive thinking, day-dreaming or worse – people who read and believe self-help delusional books like ‘The Secret’ by the Rhonda Byrne or timeless classics like ‘Think and Grow Rich’ by Napoleon Hill – everyone would want to be a billionaire.
The perks are amazing.
The choices are never-ending
The feeling is promising.
May be that is why everyone you meet, including the lazy colleague in the office who can never come to work on time, let alone be disciplined in his job, all languish in the oasis of one day becoming a rich-self-made business man. A chorus chanted by even the young, stupid and inexperienced.
Yet, no one every fathoms stress, court proceedings, bankruptcy, solitary confinement, death threats or worse denouncement by the world. No one.
Here is an amazing book that brings to life, the reality, the actuality and the finality a few greats of our time underwent that lead from dust, to the heights of envy and then back to dust.
The book covers the lives of 16 well known entrepreneurs namely:
1. Bernie Ebbers of WorldCom who lost US$180 billion with 20,000 people losing their jobs.
2. Christopher Foster, the British Millionaire who killed his own wife of 21 year and his 15 year old daughter, igniting 200 gallons of fuel to destroy his house, before killing himself
3. Mikhail Khodorkovsky, one of the richest people in the world who lost everything after he committed the unthinkable - clashing heads with Vladimir Putin
4. Jon Asgeir Johannesson of Iceland, a Billionaire who not only lost everything but destroyed Iceland by burring it in an avalanche of 50 Million Euros debt
5. Reuben Singh of United Kingdom whom Sunday Times dubbed as the ‘British Bill Gates’, whom the Guinness Book of World records crowned ‘the world’s youngest self-made millionaire’, whom every single whose who of UK showered his with praise, accolades and respect was infact…..a fraud?
6. Tim Power, whose personal close knit family wealth was close to 2.5 Billion pounds, lost billions and ended up behind bars?
7. Dick Flud. US$613 Billion wipeout. Lehman Brothers. Need I say more?
8. Guy Naggar & Peter Klimt, having assets worth billions with more than 500 directorships, to losing it all.
9. Adolf Merckle, who in 2007 was worth US$12.8 Billion, and who on 5th January 2009 killed himself.
10. Boris Berezovsky, the right hand of the then Russian President Boris Yeltsin who had all the power and money in the world, and then ended with nothing
11. Zhou Zhenqyi who was richer than all 1,299,999,989 Chinese people and then lost everything and ended in prison
12. Mark Goldberg, who in 1998 was a multi-millionaire and with one decision & within 18 months went into a multi-million debt.
13. Ken Lay, best buddy of President George Bush. Don’t know who? Let me say the magic word – US$ 63.4 Billion assets wipeout. US$ 11 Billion loss to investors. Welcome to Eron.
14. Kevin Leech – Jersey’s first billionaire and then bankrupt.
15. James Cayne, the billionaire who would take US $1,700 trip by helicopter every afternoon, just to play golf with his friends, finally whose legacy went into pieces
16. Finally, Robert Tchenguiz who magically lost 1 billion pounds with ease.
This book has all these stories – short, sweet and succinct.
I loved this book and could not put it down. Every chapter by itself takes you through the life, dreams, desires and death of these legends.
I believe everyone should and must read this book. In fact if you are ambitious, ensure you have a copy of this book kept on your desk or gift it to anyone whom you feel is ready to run the race to the Billionaires club.
In the end, one sentence in the book will outshine everything else – Ones ability to make money does not equate to intelligence or being wise.
Beware.
Overall rating
A very enjoyable book, very easy to read and very addictive in its structure and story telling ability.
A respectable 9 out of 10.
I loved this book.