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The Real Price of Everything
Rediscovering the Six Classics of Economics
(Sterling, 2008)
In his New York Times bestsellers Liar’s Poker and Moneyball, Michael Lewis gave us an unprecedented look at what goes on behind the scenes on Wall Street. Now he takes us back across the centuries to explore the four classics that created and defined not just Wall Street, but the entire economic system we live under today. Brought together with Lewis’s illuminating editorial commentary, they form an essential reference for any student of economics—in fact, for anyone who wants to understand the market forces and government policies that have shaped our world, and will continue to shape our future.
Includes:
1776: The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith
1798: An Essay on the Principle of Population by Thomas Malthus
1817: Principles of Political Economy and Taxation by David Ricardo
1899: The Theory of the Leisure Class: An Economic Study of Institutions by Thorstein Veblen
1936: The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money by John Maynard Keynes.
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The Blind Side
Evolution of a Game
(W.W. Norton, 2006)
The young man at the center of this extraordinary and moving story will one day be among the most highly paid athletes in the National Football League. When we first meet him, he is one of thirteen children by a mother addicted to crack; he does not know his real name, his father, his birthday, or any of the things a child might learn in school—such as, say, how to read or write. Nor has he ever touched a football.
What changes? He takes up football, and school, after a rich, Evangelical, Republican family plucks him from the mean streets. Their love is the first great force that alters the world's perception of the boy, whom they adopt. The second force is the evolution of professional football itself into a game where the quarterback must be protected at any cost. Our protagonist turns out to be the priceless combination of size, speed, and agility necessary to guard the quarterback's greatest vulnerability: his blind side. |
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Moneyball
The Art of Winning an Unfair Game
(W.W. Norton, 2003)
The Oakland Athletics have a secret: a winning
baseball team is made, not bought.
In major league baseball the biggest wallet is supposed to win:
rich teams spend four times as much on talent as poor teams. But over
the past four years, the Oakland Athletics, a major league team with a
minor league payroll, have had one of the best records. Last year
their superstar, Jason Giambi, went to the superrich Yankees. It
hasn't made any difference to Oakland: their fabulous season included
an American League record for consecutive victories.
Billy Beane, general manager of the Athletics, is putting into
practice on the field revolutionary principles garnered from geek
statisticians and college professors. Michael Lewis's brilliant,
irreverent reporting takes us from the dugouts and locker rooms—where
coaches and players struggle to unlearn most of what they know
about pitching and hitting—to the boardrooms, where we meet owners who
begin to look like fools at the poker table, spending enormous sums
without a clue what they are doing. Combine money, science,
entertainment, and egos, and you have a story that Michael Lewis is
magnificently suited to tell.
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Next
The Future Just Happened
(W.W. Norton, 2001)
A
mordantly funny exploration of the brave new world spawned by the
Internet.
In Liar's
Poker the barbarians seized control of the bond markets. In The New
New Thing some guys from Silicon Valley redefined the American
economy. Now, with his knowing eye and wicked pen, Michael Lewis reveals
how the Internet boom has encouraged great changes in the way we live,
work, and think. He finds that we are in the midst of one of the greatest
status revolutions in the history of the world, and the Internet is a
weapon in the hands of revolutionaries. The old priesthoods -- lawyers,
investment gurus, professionals in general—have been toppled. The
amateur, or individual, is king: fourteen-year-old children manipulate the
stock market; nineteen-year-olds take down the music industry; and
wrestlers get elected to public office. Deep, unseen forces seek to
undermine all forms of collectivism, from the mass market to the family.
Where does it all lead? And will we like where we end up?
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The
New New Thing
A Silicon Valley Story
(W.W. Norton, 1999)
The book
that does for Silicon Valley what "Liar's Poker" did for Wall
Street.
In the weird
glow of the dying millennium, Michael Lewis sets out on a safari through
Silicon Valley to find the world's most important technology entrepreneur,
the man who embodies the spirit of the coming age. He finds him in Jim
Clark, who is about to create his third, separate, billion-dollar company:
first Silicon Graphics, then Netscape-which launched the Information
Age-and now Healtheon, a startup that may turn the $1 trillion healthcare
industry on its head.
Despite the
variety of his achievements, Clark thinks of himself mainly as the creator
of "Hyperion," which happens to be a sailboat . . . not just an
ordinary yacht, but the world's largest single-mast vessel, a machine more
complex than a 747. Clark claims he will be able to sail it via computer
from his desk in San Francisco, and the new code may contain the seeds of
his next billion-dollar coup.
On the wings
of Lewis's celebrated storytelling, the reader takes the ride of a
lifetime through this strange landscape of geeks and billionaires. We get
the inside story of the battle between Netscape and Microsoft; we sit in
the room as Clark tries to persuade the investment bankers that Healtheon
is the next Microsoft; we get queasy as Clark pits his boat against the
rage of the North Atlantic in winter. And in every brilliant anecdote and
character sketch, Lewis is drawing us a map of markets and free enterprise
in the twenty-first century.
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 Liar's
Poker
(W.W. Norton, 1989)
In this shrewd
and wickedly funny book, Michael Lewis describes an astonishing era and his
own rake's progress through the jungle of a powerful investment bank. In two
short years he rose from trainee to a bond salesman who could turn over
millions of dollars' worth of doubtful bonds with just one call.
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 Trail
Fever
(Knopf, 1997)
A wickedly funny and
astute chronicle of the 1996 presidential campaign--and how we go about
choosing our leaders at the turn of the century. In it Michael Lewis
brings to the political scene the same brilliance that distinguished his
celebrated best-seller about the financial world, Liar's Poker.
Beginning with the
primaries, Lewis traveled across America--a concerned citizen who happened
to ride in candidates' airplanes (as well as rented cars in blinding New
Hampshire blizzards) and write about their adventures. Among the
contenders he observed: Pat Buchanan, a walking tour of American anger;
Lamar Alexander, who appealed to people who pretend to be nice to get
ahead; Steve Forbes, frozen in a smile and refusing to answer questions
about his father's motorcycles; Alan Keyes, one of the great political
speakers of our age, whom no one has ever heard of; Morry
Taylor--"the Grizz"--the hugely successful businessman who
became the refreshing embodiment of ordinary Americans' appetites and
ambitions; Bob Dole, a man who set out to prove he would never be
president; and Bill Clinton, the big snow goose who flew too high to be
shot out of the sky.
We watch the clichés of
this peculiar subculture collide with characters from the real world: a
pig farmer in Iowa; an evangelical preacher in Colorado Springs; a
homeless person in Manhattan; a prospective illegal immigrant in Mexico.
The politicians speak and speak, often reversing positions, denying direct
quotations, mastering the sound bite, dodging hard questions, wreaking
havoc on the English language. Spin doctors spin. Rented strangers
(campaign workers) proliferate. One particular toe sucker goes awry. Ads
are honed to misrepresent and distort. Money makes the world go round.
And the citizens are left
dumbfounded or cheering empty platitudes. When trail fever breaks on
Election Day, half of America's eligible voters stay home.
This book offers a
striking look at us and our politics and the mammoth unlikelihood of
connection between the inauthentic modern candidate and the voter's
passions, needs, and desires. In telling the story, Michael Lewis once
again proves himself a masterful observer of the American scene.
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 The
Money Culture
(Penguin, 1992)
An intrepid and
mercilessly sharp-sighted safari through the financial jungles of the
1980s--from the author of the New York Times bestseller Liar's Poker. With
devastating wit and a flair for unveiling the smoke and mirrors of high
finance, Lewis takes a new look at many of the most influential and
devastating episodes of the get-rich-quick decade.
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