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Family Trust

por Kathy Wang

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3224180,844 (3.32)6
Fiction. Literature. HTML:

Some of us are more equal than others....

Meet Stanley Huang: father, husband, ex-husband, man of unpredictable tastes and temper, aficionado of all-inclusive vacations and bargain luxury goods, newly diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. For years, Stanley has claimed that he's worth a small fortune. But the time is now coming when the details of his estate will finally be revealed, and Stanley's family is nervous.

For his son Fred, the inheritance Stanley has long alluded to would soothe the pain caused by years of professional disappointment. By now, the Harvard Business School graduate had expected to be a financial tech god â?? not a minor investor at a middling corporate firm, where he isn't even allowed to fly business class.

Stanley's daughter, Kate, is a middle manager with one of Silicon Valley's most prestigious tech companies. She manages the capricious demands of her world-famous boss and the needs of her two young children all while supporting her would-be entrepreneur husband (just until his startup gets off the ground, which will surely be soon). But lately, Kate has been sensing something amiss; just because you say you have it all, it doesn't mean that you actually do.

Stanley's second wife, Mary Zhu, twenty-eight years his junior, has devoted herself to making her husband comfortable in every wayâ??rubbing his feet, cooking his favorite dishes, massaging his ego. But lately, her commitment has waned; caring for a dying old man is far more difficult than she expected.

Linda Liang, Stanley's first wife, knows her ex better than anyone. She worked hard for decades to ensure their financial security, and is determined to see her children get their due. Single for nearly a decade, she might finally be ready for some romantic companionship. But where does a seventy-two year old Chinese woman in California go to find an appropriate boyfriend?

As Stanley's death approaches, the Huangs are faced with unexpected challenges that upend them and eventually lead them to discover what they most value. A compelling tale of cultural expectations, career ambitions and our relationships with the people who know us best, Family Trust skewers the ambition and desires that drive Silicon Valley and draws a sharply loving portrait of modern American family life… (mais)

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Mostrando 1-5 de 41 (seguinte | mostrar todos)
A variety of storylines but I just didn't love it. ( )
  hellokirsti | Jan 3, 2024 |
It's once again Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month, so I'm reading stuff by AAPI authors. There's something to be said about narrative scarcity when we compare our handful of stories to each other, I tell myself as I think of this as "the sharp skewering of wealthy expectations in [b:Crazy Rich Asians|16085481|Crazy Rich Asians (Crazy Rich Asians, #1)|Kevin Kwan|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1364852559s/16085481.jpg|21571970] coupled with financial concerns of [b:The Wangs vs. the World|28114515|The Wangs vs. the World|Jade Chang|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1451493647s/28114515.jpg|45235074]"

Family patriarch Stanley Huang has pancreatic cancer, aka the one with one of the lowest survival rates, and the family must cope. Son Fred is a venture capitalist for a "middling" firm (still handling way more money than I've seen, but he feels inadequate as he thinks he should've landed a 'bigger' job with a degree from Harvard Business School) but may have found a lucrative opportunity overseas, and daughter Kate is an executive for a Silicon Valley company that has vibes of an Apple-like with the a creative terror similar to Musk as her boss, though she has trouble at home trying to figure out what her husband does all day as he works on his startup. Stanley's first wife (and Kate & Fred's mother) Linda is a pragmatic woman, but in her loneliness turns to online dating, and second wife Mary seems to be background/kind of just there until we get a PoV later in the book.

I can't put my finger on why I liked this more than Wangs vs the World (perhaps because all the family units felt more woven together, unlike having the older sister in a separate thread from the rest of the family?) Unfortunately, a line Fred says when talking to a would-be partner in an investment that "all the unicorns are staying private, like Uber and Pinterest" is now dated as they've both gone public in spring 2019. Then again, aren't all 'contemporary' novels eventually going to become period pieces? I felt for Kate & Linda's plots the strongest, and had little sympathy for Fred though I can easily see him hanging out with Edison Cheng from CRA, with both men thinking the other an insufferable cock. ( )
  Daumari | Dec 28, 2023 |
This one fell flat for me. I was hoping it would be more entertaining as Crazy Rich Asians, but it doesn’t hold mustard. The characters weren’t loveable and certain aspects wasn’t realistic. A million bucks in inheritance is really NOT much money. Especially, when they were well off to begin with. That point bothered me. ( )
  GeauxGetLit | May 27, 2023 |
"Life is about solving problems...If you cannot respect this, then I have nothing more to say to you." So says Linda Liang, the matriarch of the titular family in "Family Trust." I ended up really enjoying this book even though part of the way into it I was wondering why the heck I should care about any of these "terrible people." The book is funny, moving, and ultimately edifying. That quote helped me understand a lot of the motivations and actions that drove the characters and the story. Each of them is solving the problems that life gives them in the way they think they should be solved. The title has multiple meanings, both referring to the idea of leaving money in a financial family trust, but more importantly the idea of trust within families, the work world, and society in general. The book alternates points of view amongst the characters and so you see the events through the different eyes and the scene you saw play out in one way ("how dare she say that!") ends up in a totally different light, which is how the world really works. Everyone is hit by betrayal in multiple arenas, family members who steal, lie or cheat, work colleagues who snipe and undermine, and each of them is left to solve the problem. But in the end I think the key to everything in the book (and maybe in life) is learning to trust oneself. As Linda thinks, "but what could be more important than one's own self?" All the striving, the need to achieve, the need to please others, the desire to show success, in the end it really isn't the main thing. Once you truly know yourself and most importantly trust yourself and your thoughts and feelings you can really find the things that make life enjoyable and worth living. It isn't wealth and the markers of wealth that makes it happen, it is companionship, the freedom to live as you want. To enjoy the things you enjoy when the mood strikes. The daughter Kate is stuck in a venture capital event at one point and realizes it is just not for her. "I'm too old and have too much hate." I know that feeling. And maybe now I can trust it more. ( )
  MarkMad | Jul 14, 2021 |
The book jacket bills this as The Nest meets Crazy Rich Asians and I would add meets a tax form. Just a little too much business-y for me, but that is not my forte anyway. The Huang family is in turmoil. Stanley, the patriarch is dying, but whether he has a will or not is up for debate. And whether he has anything to leave in his will is another issue. His daughter Kate and son Fred both have plans for the money if it exists. Kate is in the throes of marriage turmoil. She is bankrolling her husband who is doing a start-up, but appears lately to be doing nothing. Fred meanwhile is unhappy in his work and is looking to make a change, but it will take a few million in investment to socially/business climb where he wants to be. His Harvard business degree isn’t giving him the competing edge in Silicon Valley and he is approached by some alums to invest in a Thai business venture. Linda, Stanley’s ex-wife is the one with money, but she wants to be sure his money goes to their kids instead of his second wife Mary and her money- grubbing immigrant sisters. She is also online dating on Tigerlily an exclusive Asian site. Dark comedy but needed more levity. ( )
  CarrieWuj | Oct 24, 2020 |
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Stanley Huang sat, naked but for the thin cotton dressing gown crumpled against the sterile white paper in the hospital room, and listened to the young doctor describe how he would die.
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Fiction. Literature. HTML:

Some of us are more equal than others....

Meet Stanley Huang: father, husband, ex-husband, man of unpredictable tastes and temper, aficionado of all-inclusive vacations and bargain luxury goods, newly diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. For years, Stanley has claimed that he's worth a small fortune. But the time is now coming when the details of his estate will finally be revealed, and Stanley's family is nervous.

For his son Fred, the inheritance Stanley has long alluded to would soothe the pain caused by years of professional disappointment. By now, the Harvard Business School graduate had expected to be a financial tech god â?? not a minor investor at a middling corporate firm, where he isn't even allowed to fly business class.

Stanley's daughter, Kate, is a middle manager with one of Silicon Valley's most prestigious tech companies. She manages the capricious demands of her world-famous boss and the needs of her two young children all while supporting her would-be entrepreneur husband (just until his startup gets off the ground, which will surely be soon). But lately, Kate has been sensing something amiss; just because you say you have it all, it doesn't mean that you actually do.

Stanley's second wife, Mary Zhu, twenty-eight years his junior, has devoted herself to making her husband comfortable in every wayâ??rubbing his feet, cooking his favorite dishes, massaging his ego. But lately, her commitment has waned; caring for a dying old man is far more difficult than she expected.

Linda Liang, Stanley's first wife, knows her ex better than anyone. She worked hard for decades to ensure their financial security, and is determined to see her children get their due. Single for nearly a decade, she might finally be ready for some romantic companionship. But where does a seventy-two year old Chinese woman in California go to find an appropriate boyfriend?

As Stanley's death approaches, the Huangs are faced with unexpected challenges that upend them and eventually lead them to discover what they most value. A compelling tale of cultural expectations, career ambitions and our relationships with the people who know us best, Family Trust skewers the ambition and desires that drive Silicon Valley and draws a sharply loving portrait of modern American family life

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