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A screenwriter may have fed Michael Douglas the line “Greed is good” but he might have been quoting a Wall Street man verbatim. I wish Michael Lewis’s memoir Liar’s Poker were also a piece of fiction, but it’s all too real.
Fresh out of the London school of economics, Lewis landed a job at Salomon Brothers, the Wall Street investment firm that invented the mortgage bond. During the next few years, Lewis grew from whipping boy to bond salesman and earned millions for the company before he finally ...more
Fresh out of the London school of economics, Lewis landed a job at Salomon Brothers, the Wall Street investment firm that invented the mortgage bond. During the next few years, Lewis grew from whipping boy to bond salesman and earned millions for the company before he finally ...more

A book steeped in financial lexicon (which typically would make it outside of my comfort zone) but Lewis is entertaining enough that it was worth the effort. Highly relevant today as reckless greed rules the day on Wall St. and this behind the scenes tale documents the beginning of much of that mentality.
And why is it everything I read by Lewis makes me drop my jaw in disbelief about things going on around me?
And why is it everything I read by Lewis makes me drop my jaw in disbelief about things going on around me?

Jul 21, 2011
Rodney Ulyate
marked it as to-read
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
recommended-zakaria-fareed

Feb 27, 2015
Pang
marked it as to-read
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
nonfiction,
ecomics-finance