caverns_of_steel's review

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4.0

The beautiful story of a guy who had everything one needs to shine in society, and who threw it all away in order to help poor children in the third world have access to books and a decent education.

A quick and often funny read, this book will open your mind and hopefully inspire you to do something yourself in order to change the world we're living in! (it sure opened mine)

indiescribe's review

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4.0

Inspiring. One man can start the fire.

kn1tt3r's review

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3.0

Easy, entertaining read. The book aims to inspire rather than instruct.

I was hoping that there would be more nitty-gritty details of how to set up a non-profit in a third world country. Unfortunately, that information was painted in very broad strokes (we hired so and so...) without detailing the challenges faced.

tdrapeau's review

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5.0


In 1998, John [Wood] took a vacation that changed his life. Trekking through a remote Himalayan village, he struck up conversation with a schoolteacher, who invited John to visit his school. There, John discovered that the few books available were so precious that they were kept under lock and key - to protect them from children! Fewer than 20 books, all backpacker cast-aways, were available for more than 450 students.


The above quote was plucked from an "About John Wood" section at the end of the book Leaving Microsoft to Change the World, by former Microsoft executive John Wood. John tells a great story of a life and career change from hard charging Microsoft (where he worked from 1991 to 1998) to running a large scale non profit called Room to Read. This organization helps to build libraries, schools, reading rooms, computer centers, and funds scholarships for girls in countries as diverse as Nepal, Cambodia, Vietnam, India, South Africa and Zambia.

This book is chuck full of inspiration and engaging stories. pp85-86 tells a tale of John Wood's young life where at 5 years old, he made a stack of nickels and dimes selling paintings he had made to neighborhood families. After a stern talking-to by his mother never to go door-to-door selling paintings again, John was found counting out a bigger bounty. When asked about it, he replied that he hadn't gone behind his mother's back and sold another batch of paintings door-to-door - he had merely passed that job onto his best friend Jimmy, who took a penny commission for each sale, leaving John with the remaining 4 cents.

Going into a room of high earners and explaining to them how your charity is different from the 10 they heard of last week is difficult. If Room to Read had anything working for them, it was that John ran the operation with extremely low overhead. If you donated $8,000, there was a library built. You knew where your money went. This immediate visual pleased lots of donors and caused a great influx of funds for Room to Read. On one such fund raising event, John speaks to a room about donating money that would pay for 100 girls to continue their education. In the back of the room, laying in wait, was Don Listwin, legend in Silicon Valley, #2 executive at Cisco, then CEO of Openwave. Pleased with what he was hearing, Don enters (pp196-197):


I'm going to interrupt our regularly scheduled slide show with an announcement, and a challenge. There are more than fifty of you here tonight. For every one of you who sponsor a scholarship, and you have to write the check tonight, I will match you, dollar-for-dollar, girl-for-girl, year-for-year. You fund fifty and I will fund fifty. We need to do this. No excuses.
...
Furthermore, there are some people here who used to work for me at Cisco, and a few who work for me now at Openwave. I want them to pay attention to this next part. For every school that one of you underwrites tonight, I will match you school-for-school." Dramatic pause. "How about it, Mark?"
Mark, sitting one row in front of Don, emits a nervous laugh. He pauses, probably doing the math on how much money he's made while working for Don through some flush years in Silicon Valley. Realizing that $8,000 is probably a rounding error, he replies, "Count me in, Don!"
"Great. And how about you, Bill?" Don's eyes are laser-locked on his next target.
Poor Bill. He not only has Don's pressure on him, but Mark's example. "Count me in too, Don."


This book is filled with great stories of personal, organizational, and governmental generosity. For those who have worked a number of years in a field and want to do something different, John Wood gives us all a towering example of what is possible. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book, and would recommend it without hesitation. Bravo John!

Room to Read is operating today, and is taking donations now.

Room to Read website: roomtoread.org
To donate: roomtoread.org/involvement/donate.php

elizabethcraft's review

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3.0

I follow Room to Read on Twitter. A few months ago, I added the Room to Read Twibbon (a twibbon is a tiny picture that's displayed on your Twitter avatar). A few minutes later, I got a message saying I was the 100th person to add the Twibbon. My prize was a free autographed copy of the book. Pretty cool.

This book demonstrates why Room to Read is an excellent organization. John Wood recounts a trip to Nepal in the 90's during which he was struck by the kindness of the people and the poverty in which they lived. From there, he describes leaving Microsoft to begin a nonprofit that build libraries in countries like Nepal. I admire the insane amount of work that John Wood put into founding RtR and I hope this book causes more people to support their work. While his writing might not win a Pulitzer, his story is inspiring.
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