EBOOK

About
Roddy Akbari left Iran as a teenager with one bag and no certainty about what would come next. He moved through Zürich, La Paz, Mexico City, and eventually the United States, carrying the weight of his family's sacrifice and the responsibility to justify the chance he'd been given.
He washed dishes, worked in a gas station and various other jobs to pay the bills while earning degrees in mathematics. He didn't stumble into academia; he worked toward it. Years later, he stood at the front of his own classroom as a professor, teaching the way he had been taught to think: clearly, patiently, without shortcuts. The path wasn't linear, and it wasn't easy, but it was intentional.
This memoir follows the long stretch between leaving home and building one. It's about honoring parents from a distance, becoming a husband and a father to two daughters, and learning that survival isn't the same as fulfillment. It's about expectation, responsibility, and the effort required to create a life that holds together.
At its center, this is the story of a man who left with almost nothing and refused to waste the opportunity he'd been given, even when the version of success he reached looked different from what he imagined as a young man stepping onto a plane.
He washed dishes, worked in a gas station and various other jobs to pay the bills while earning degrees in mathematics. He didn't stumble into academia; he worked toward it. Years later, he stood at the front of his own classroom as a professor, teaching the way he had been taught to think: clearly, patiently, without shortcuts. The path wasn't linear, and it wasn't easy, but it was intentional.
This memoir follows the long stretch between leaving home and building one. It's about honoring parents from a distance, becoming a husband and a father to two daughters, and learning that survival isn't the same as fulfillment. It's about expectation, responsibility, and the effort required to create a life that holds together.
At its center, this is the story of a man who left with almost nothing and refused to waste the opportunity he'd been given, even when the version of success he reached looked different from what he imagined as a young man stepping onto a plane.