Gambling Man: The Secret Story of the World’s Greatest Disruptor, Masayoshi Son
Lionel Barber. One Signal, $29.99 (352p) ISBN 978-1-6680-7074-1
Barber (The Powerful and the Damned), a former editor at the Financial Times, provides an entertaining biography of tech mogul Masayoshi Son. The son of impoverished Korean immigrants, Son had a hardscrabble upbringing in 1960s Japan. After studying computer science at Berkeley, he returned to Japan in 1980 and launched the software distribution company SoftBank. Barber details how bottomless reserves of chutzpah helped Son transform SoftBank into a multinational tech conglomerate, describing how in the company’s early days, he secured a $450,000 loan on little more than confidence (he at the time had “no collateral or track record”). Tracing the highlights of Son’s career, Barber credits him for investing in the Chinese e-commerce platform Alibaba when it was only six months old and recounts how he secured a deal to become the exclusive distributor of iPhones in Japan. However, Son’s propensity for risk-taking could also cause major financial troubles, Barber writes, noting that Son’s decision to funnel billions into the startup WeWork backfired after it declared bankruptcy in 2023. Barber’s evenhanded portrait depicts Son as ambitious, stubborn, and above all scrappy, recounting with quiet admiration how he blustered his way to the peaks of corporate power. This real-life rags to riches story enthralls. Agent: Andrew Wylie, Wylie Agency. (Jan.)
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Reviewed on: 11/22/2024
Genre: Nonfiction