Iron Rice Bowl

Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Iron Rice Bowl by Tom Kwok, Lorraine Cobcroft
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Tom Kwok ISBN: 9781370453825
Publisher: Lorraine Cobcroft Publication: February 2, 2018
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Tom Kwok
ISBN: 9781370453825
Publisher: Lorraine Cobcroft
Publication: February 2, 2018
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

Tom Kwok writes, at the end of his memoir: ''I wrote, last night, to thank my father for my life. I told him how, to trick the evil spirits, my family gave me a girl’s name. They called me Loo Shang, a name that meant ‘the way to get riches’.''

In 1950, Chairman Mao’s Communist Party confiscated the Kwok family’s land to give to village peasants.  His family fled to Hong Kong, where his mother worked thirteen days each fortnight to earn the meagre income that sustained them. He  hardly knew his mother, but he  has her and his paternal grandmother to thank for the opportunity to migrate to Australia and become Tommy Kwok.

Life was hard for Loo Shang. Life was even harder for Tommy Kwok. But he found friends and mentors in unlikely places, and he benefited from the unexpected kindness of strangers. His grandmother instilled strong values of honesty and diligence. She taught him how to earn respect.

Enriched with extensive exposition of Chinese history, customs and beliefs, Iron Rice Bowl is the story of Chinaman Kwok Loo Shang's struggle to become the Australian, Tommy Kwok. He didn’t quite ‘’get riches’’ in the material sense, but he is rich in every way that matters. He has an iron rice bowl. He is happy.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Tom Kwok writes, at the end of his memoir: ''I wrote, last night, to thank my father for my life. I told him how, to trick the evil spirits, my family gave me a girl’s name. They called me Loo Shang, a name that meant ‘the way to get riches’.''

In 1950, Chairman Mao’s Communist Party confiscated the Kwok family’s land to give to village peasants.  His family fled to Hong Kong, where his mother worked thirteen days each fortnight to earn the meagre income that sustained them. He  hardly knew his mother, but he  has her and his paternal grandmother to thank for the opportunity to migrate to Australia and become Tommy Kwok.

Life was hard for Loo Shang. Life was even harder for Tommy Kwok. But he found friends and mentors in unlikely places, and he benefited from the unexpected kindness of strangers. His grandmother instilled strong values of honesty and diligence. She taught him how to earn respect.

Enriched with extensive exposition of Chinese history, customs and beliefs, Iron Rice Bowl is the story of Chinaman Kwok Loo Shang's struggle to become the Australian, Tommy Kwok. He didn’t quite ‘’get riches’’ in the material sense, but he is rich in every way that matters. He has an iron rice bowl. He is happy.

More books from Biography & Memoir

Cover of the book More Than Money by Tom Kwok
Cover of the book In the Neighborhood by Tom Kwok
Cover of the book The Lost Girls by Tom Kwok
Cover of the book The Good Fight by Tom Kwok
Cover of the book This Victorian Life by Tom Kwok
Cover of the book Susanna Wesley by Tom Kwok
Cover of the book Summary and Analysis of the Dressmaker of Khair Khana: Five Sisters, One Remarkable Family, and the Woman Who Risked Everything to Keep Them Safe by Tom Kwok
Cover of the book Frank Lloyd Wright by Tom Kwok
Cover of the book None Shall Divide Us by Tom Kwok
Cover of the book Off the Road by Tom Kwok
Cover of the book Two Worlds, One Mind by Tom Kwok
Cover of the book Karl Marx's Capital by Tom Kwok
Cover of the book The Yarn Whisperer by Tom Kwok
Cover of the book Posting a Diplomatic Bag by Tom Kwok
Cover of the book I, Migrant by Tom Kwok
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy