Too Big to Fail: The Inside Story of How Wall Street and Washington Fought to Save the FinancialS ystem--and Themselves

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$18.25 - $32.60
UPC:
9780143120278
Maximum Purchase:
2 units
Binding:
Paperback
Publication Date:
2011-05-11
Release Date:
2011-05-11
Author:
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Language:
english
Edition:
Media Tie In, Updated

Product Overview

Named a Best Book of the Year by: The Economist, The Financial Times, Business Week, and800-CEO-Read

Winner of the Gerald Loeb Award for Best Business Book

Too Big To Fail is too good to put down. . . . It is the story of the actors in the most extraordinary financial spectacle in 80 years, and it is told brilliantly.The Economist

Vigorously reported, superbly organized . . . For those of us who didnt pursue MBAsand have the penny-ante salaries to prove itSorkins book offers a clear, cogent explanation of what happened and why it matters.Julia Keller, Chicago Tribune

Sorkins prodigious reporting and lively writing put the reader in the room for some of the biggest-dollar conference calls in history. Its an entertaining, brisk book.Paul M. Barrett,The New York Times Book Review

Sorkins densely detailed and astonishing narrative of the epic financial crisis of 2008 is an extraordinary achievement that will be hard to surpass as the definitive account.John Gapper,Financial Times


A brilliantly reported true-life thriller that goes behind the scenes of the financial crisis on Wall Street and in Washington, the basis for the HBO film

In one of the most gripping financial narratives in decades, Andrew Ross Sorkin-a New York Times columnist and one of the country's most respected financial reporters-delivers the first definitive blow- by-blow account of the epochal economic crisis that brought the world to the brink. Through unprecedented access to the players involved, he re-creates all the drama and turmoil of these turbulent days, revealing never-before-disclosed details and recounting how, motivated as often by ego and greed as by fear and self-preservation, the most powerful men and women in finance and politics decided the fate of the world's economy.

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