Sunday, September 16, 2007

Eat, Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert and Alan Greenspan's New Book, "The Age of Turbulence: Adventures in a new World

This month, there is a series of good books that will be coming out. Among them, Mr. Greenspan's book, "The Age of Turbulence: Adventures in a New World" is sure to be a bestseller as soon it comes out tomorrow morning. In it, Greenspan criticizes the Bush Administration for not responsibly handling the nation's spending and racking up big budget deficits. Mr. Greenspan who has served more than 5 presidents before retiring last year and was replaced by Bernanke did not mince his words. He is free to say and write whatever he wants to. "Greenspan takes his own party to task for forsaking conservative principles that favor small government. "My biggest frustration remained the president's unwillingness to wield his veto against out-of-control spending," Greenspan wrote.


So far, critics are saying that it is one of his best books. It will stand as his legacy. "The Age of Turbulence is Alan Greenspan's incomparable reckoning with the nature of this new world - how we got here, what we're living through, and what lies over the horizon, for good and for ill-channeled through his own experiences working in the command room of the global economy for longer and with greater effect than any other single living figure."


Another book you may have heard so many things about is "Eat, Pray, Love" by Elizabeth Gilbert. It is a book about her search for good foods in Italy, spiritual connection or renewal in India and love in Bali where she met her future husband, a Brasilian businessman who swore he would never marry again. But in order to live with Elizabeth in the US, he had to marry her. That was the catch.

Another book I am reading is "If I Did It: The Confessions of a Killer" written by O J Simpson, but acquired and published by the friends of Fred Goldman. Lo and behold, Simpson is back in the news this weekend. He is arrested by armed robbery in Las Vegas over some memorabilia at Palace Station.

Other books to check out: Inquiry into Daniel Goleman's Social Intelligence, Raising Smart Kids and Becoming Successfu and Young Man, Go West: Eat, Pray, Love, Shop and Dance







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Sunday, September 02, 2007

New York Taxi Driver Wrote Book but Continues to Get Inspired by Driving

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New York City Gay and Jewish Cabbie on the Literary Map: Melissa Plaut, blogger and author Released Hack: How I Stopped Worrying About What to Do with My Life and Started Driving a Yellow Cab (Villard, $21.95)

Mss Melissa Plaut is one of the few female taxi drivers that you will meet in New York City. She has long realized that she has to take her destiny in her own hands. After graduating from the University of New Mexico, she found a job as a concierge with Miramax Films in Manhattan. She realized that working was hard labor there. She left the job and started traveling in Europe and Morocco. She returned to New York to get some other jobs. She was still trying to find out what she wanted to do. She quickly realized that she needed to do something to earn some money. She went to a Taxi-driving school. She became a taxi driver, a job that would help her with her fear of the unknown and satisfy her curiosity. She received her hack licence on her 29th birthday. She realizes that she has to keep moving to get some returns on her investment. She had to lease the cab, spend on gas and put in many hours without taking a break or dinner.

Melissa Plaut soon discovered that taxi driving is dominated by males, especially immigrants with Pakistani and Indian backgrounds. As she wrote about her new job, she could not get used to her new status. She felt "frustrated by my utter helplessness and powerlessness.. and irritated by the second-class citizen status that is assigned to you the second you sit behind the wheel of a yellow cab, no matter what race, sex, nationality or color you are."

She was ready to experience what non-white, no-American-born people experience on a daily basis. She was just experience the tip of the iceberg. Even though she was very tired, she wrote her observation and thoughts in Newyorkhack.blogspot.com. She also uploaded her pictures and filled in the details before forgetting them. She becomes our cab driver who writes or the writer who drives a cab. No matter what, she follows in the footsteps of 1935 musical comedy Broadway Gondolier from Dick Powell and 1976's Taxi Driver with Robert De Niro.

Melissa likes the experience of listening in on complete strangers who share her vehicle. The book describes why she began driving a taxi, what she has learned and passengers she remembers. She keenly remembers the passenger who introduced herself to her as a Dominatrix. She was complaining about her Wall Street clients. She is referring to the brokers, bankers, investors, hedge funds managers who consider themselves as self-important masters of the universe. They were lousy tippers. Melissa prefers passengers who are dominatrices, escorts, hookers and pimps. These people are in the service industry. They understand the importance of adding a few more dollars to the fares. Yet, moving to get the fares was a constant struggle for her. By the way, the dominatrix tipped her generously.

Melissa Plaut considers her moving taxi as a mobile theater. Her passengers have role to play. She writes about the young couple who were using telephone to talk to each other while riding in the taxi. Even other vehicles become characters in her moving play. She talks to other vehicles whose drivers want to cut in front of her. By the time she returns to the garage at the end of her shift, she knows how much she has made or whether she has recouped her investment.







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