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Mobs, Messiahs, and Markets: Surviving the Public Spectacle in Finance and Politics (Agora Series) written by William Bonner, Lila Rajiva Studio : Wiley by Wiley Publisher : Wiley Released : 2007-08-31 Availability : Usually ships in 24 hours and eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Number of Items : 1 EAN : 9780470112328 Avg. Customer Rating: (based on 76 reviews)
List Price : $27.95 Our Price : $6.99
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Product Description |
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Why Going Against the Grain Pays. Bestselling author Bill Bonner has long been a maverick observer of the financial and political world, sharpening his sardonic wit, in particular, on the vagaries of the investing public. Market booms and busts, tulip manias and dotcom bubbles, venture capitalists and vulture funds, he lets you know, are best explained not by dry statistics and obscure theories but by the metaphors and analogies of literature. Now, in Mobs, Messiahs, and Markets, Bonner and freelance journalist Lila Rajiva use literary economics to offer broader insights into mass behavior and its devastating effects on society. Why is it, they ask, that perfectly sane and responsible individuals can get together, and by some bizarre alchemy turn into an irrational mob? What makes them trust charlatans and demagogues who manipulate their worst instincts? Why do they abandon good sense, good behavior and good taste when an empty slogan is waved in front of them. Why is the road to hell paved with so many sterling intentions? Why is there a fool on every corner and a knave in every public office? In attempting an answer, the authors weave a light-hearted journey through history, politics and finance to show group think at work in an improbable array of instances, from medieval crusades to the architectural follies of hedge-fund managers. Their journey takes them ultimately to the desk of the chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank and to a cautionary tale of the current bubble economy. They warn that the gush of credit let loose by Alan Greenspan and multiplied by the sophisticated number games of Wall Street whizzes is fraught with perils for the unwary. Boom without end, pronounces The Street. But Bonner and Rajiva are more cynical. When the higher math and the greater greed come together, watch out below! Mobs, Messiahs, and Markets ends by giving concrete advice on how readers can avoid what the authors call the public spectacle of modern finance, and become, instead, private investors - knowing their own mind and following their own intuitions. The authors have no gimmicks to offer here - but instead give a better understanding of the dynamics of market behavior, allowing prudent investors to protect themselves from the fads and follies of the investment markets. |
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I Want My Money Back |
As someone who frequently purchases books about history, markets, and politics, I was appalled.
This is the first book I have read in years that made me want to get my money back. Since that isn't possible I have decided to try to save others.
This is a grossly inadequate book.
Save your money. You'd get better insight from your local bartender( and less smugness as well). |
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Too many jokes |
This book espouses a variety of important free market ideas with healthy doses of skepticism throughout. Unfortunately, the authors seem to be more concerned with making jokes than with their subject matter. They also engage in outright name-calling, which further discredits their arguments, often supported with completely unrelated anecdotes.
Free markets and individualism deserve better representation.
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If you like The Daily Reckoning, you'll like this book. |
I read Bonner's Daily Reckoning e-letter every now and then and I enjoy it for his commentary and often accurate economic predictions. This book is similar in writing style, but with fewer of the useful bits the e-letter delivers. It is also not, as one reader mentioned, a strictly financial book, but more of a sociological survey.
The best parts of the book are in the latter chapters, where he gives us his plan (buy gold) and gets back into his usual (but useful for its predictive potential) end of the world riff. Before that, however, it is, as another person put it, like sitting next to that crazy drunk guy on the subway who won't shut up. The co-authorship of the book probably adds to the effect, since you really can't tell who's writing each chapter at any given moment. Schizophrenic authorship isn't good for books.
Although I did not always think his metaphors were accurate or relevant, I still generally enjoyed the socio-political commentary about the behavior of crowds and Bonner's challenges to the status quo. His example of the success of non-democratic Hong Kong versus the increasingly democratic Imperial Britain was very enlightening. Democracy does not, ipso facto, result in a booming economy, in fact a non democracy or even an absolute dictatorship can do quite well, as Bonner points out.
Overall, the book needed more focus and better organization, but if you have the time, it's still worth a look.
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Fasten your Psychic Seatbelt |
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This book provides great insight into why our "macro" solutions and our social and political "heroes" consistently walk us off of a cliff. In addition to amply illuminating the public spectacles of history, the authors give us a sound anthropology for the thin and fragile veneer of our civilization. The diamond at the bottom of all this dismal science is that as individuals and in small, human-scaled organizations, we still have the capacity for selflessness and for good. Which, by the way, is the same insight I take away from the Bible. |
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Really disappointed |
Well, I do not usually write a review but is so surprised to see that this book is ranked as 4 stars overall in the Americancivilwar, that will make me more skeptical about the ranking in Americancivilwar.
Bought it last year and never think it worth a second read. A true disppointment by any measure. Would have given it a 0 star if it is possible. As a stand alone book, it deserve not merit. No much of substance. The only way that make me feel better is thinking about some royality goes to the author whoes comments made me laugh when I encountered them on web from time to time. Certainly in no way will it become a so called classic. |
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