Dot Com Bubble Books
Showing 1-13 of 13
The Cookbook Collector (Hardcover)
by (shelved 6 times as dot-com-bubble)
avg rating 3.33 — 13,367 ratings — published 2010
Internet Bubble, The (Hardcover)
by (shelved 2 times as dot-com-bubble)
avg rating 3.29 — 49 ratings — published 1999
Origins of the Crash: The Great Bubble and Its Undoing (Paperback)
by (shelved 2 times as dot-com-bubble)
avg rating 3.83 — 390 ratings — published 2004
The New New Thing: A Silicon Valley Story (Paperback)
by (shelved 2 times as dot-com-bubble)
avg rating 3.76 — 10,266 ratings — published 1999
Dot.con: How America Lost Its Mind and Money in the Internet Era (Paperback)
by (shelved 2 times as dot-com-bubble)
avg rating 3.90 — 533 ratings — published 2002
A Tale for the Time Being (Hardcover)
by (shelved 2 times as dot-com-bubble)
avg rating 4.06 — 135,682 ratings — published 2013
The Accidental Investment Banker: Inside the Decade that Transformed Wall Street (Hardcover)
by (shelved 1 time as dot-com-bubble)
avg rating 3.58 — 848 ratings — published 2006
A Very Public Offering: The Story of theglobe.com and the First Internet Revolution (Kindle Edition)
by (shelved 1 time as dot-com-bubble)
avg rating 3.90 — 21 ratings — published
Burn Rate : How I Survived the Gold Rush Years on the Internet (Hardcover)
by (shelved 1 time as dot-com-bubble)
avg rating 3.67 — 258 ratings — published 1998
Irrational Exuberance (Paperback)
by (shelved 1 time as dot-com-bubble)
avg rating 3.98 — 8,489 ratings — published 2000
Boo Hoo: A Dot.com Story from Concept to Catastrophe (Paperback)
by (shelved 1 time as dot-com-bubble)
avg rating 3.81 — 323 ratings — published 2001
The Entrepreneurs of Silicon Valley (Audible Audio)
by (shelved 1 time as dot-com-bubble)
avg rating 3.84 — 130 ratings — published
The Real Crash (Hardcover)
by (shelved 1 time as dot-com-bubble)
avg rating 3.88 — 1,351 ratings — published 2012
“A sobering denouement had to come...exponential growth is a potent delusion-maker, and in 1999, 10 years after the Nikkei’s peak, I was thinking about the Japanese experience as we were waiting to claim our rental car at San Francisco airport. Silicon Valley was years into its first dotcom bubble, and even with advance reservations people had to wait for the just-returned cars to get serviced and released again into the halting traffic on the clogged Bayshore freeway. Mindful of the Japanese experience, I was thinking that every year after 1995 might be the last spell of what Alan Greenspan famously called irrational exuberance, but it was not in 1996 or 1997 or 1998. And even more so than a decade earlier, there were many economists ready to assure American investors that this spell of exponential growth was really different, that the old rules do not apply in the New Economy where endless rapid growth will readily continue.”
― Growth: From Microorganisms to Megacities
― Growth: From Microorganisms to Megacities
