The American dream is alive and real. It’s nice to see someone embodying the somewhat stereotypical attributes of the American dream in a manner that cannot be derided, or in other ways maligned by the crowd. With the telling title How Far Do You Want to Go?: Lessons from a Common-Sense Billionaire, John Catsimatidis writes in an unusually thoughtful and straightforward manner about the relevant topics. There’s never a sense of spin or condescension, as can be the case with even the best intentioned leadership and business advice books. Nor does it have the crass bullishness of work like Think Big and Kick-Ass: In Business and in Life. Catsi Matidis instead has this kind of storyteller house-style, making the concepts and on-the-ground strategy feel immediately accessible. This is indicative in the wording of the title, akin to an MLA or position paper. Because at the end of the day, in a nutshell that is what the book conceptually focuses the most upon. How far is one to go, in a manner that is practical, realistic, and ensures the success they crave?
“What can I tell you? I learn something new every day,” Catsimatidis writes, in aforementioned style. “…‘God bless America, land that I love.’ I knew a little about the history of this stirring anthem. It was written by Irving Berlin, an immigrant not so different from me, who’d come to the United States from Russia at age five. Berlin wrote the words and music in 1918 while serving in the US Army at Camp Upton in Yaphank, New York, about sixty-five miles from Federal Hall. But he put the song aside because he didn’t believe it fit well in Yip Yip Yaphank, a musical revue he was writing at the time. Not until 1938, with the rise of Adolf Hitler, did Berlin, who was Jewish, believe the time was right to resurrect the song. It was introduced by the singer Kate Smith on her radio program on Armistice Day. I’m not sure how many of the people in Federal Hall knew that story. But they understood the feeling behind it, which was impossible not to share. Their voices filled the grand, domed hall.”
Part of what contributes to Catsimatidis as a reliable narrator is his openness about starting from the bottom, and making it to the top. He is indicative of the American dream because he’s a part of it, starting as an immigrant arriving in the country not speaking a word of English. By framing the narrative from that specific angle, he’s able to make the material feel viscerally affecting. For someone serious about success, it only adds to why they already would want to read this book. Things stay relatively simple in terms of the presentational mechanics, enabling Catsimatidis to focus on communicating concepts freely – without the kind of excess, flowery prose or narrative salesmanship other books rely upon. He tells it, simply put, like it is. It’s a welcome relief, even an elixir to what can put the average person off on this subject. When you look at it as achieving a part of the American dream, that is something to celebrate – bar none. Catsimatidis is able to communicate this beautifully, and that’s something to be commended.