Too Big to Fail

Too Big to Fail

Inside the Battle to Save Wall Street

Summary

SHORTLISTED FOR THE BBC SAMUEL JOHNSON PRIZE 2010


They were masters of the financial universe, flying in private jets and raking in billions. They thought they were too big to fail. Yet they would bring the world to its knees.

Andrew Ross Sorkin, the news-breaking New York Times journalist, delivers the first true in-the-room account of the most powerful men and women at the eye of the financial storm - from reviled Lehman Brothers CEO Dick 'the gorilla' Fuld, to banking whiz Jamie Dimon, from bullish Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson to AIG's Joseph Cassano, dubbed 'The Man Who Crashed the World'.

Through unprecedented access to the key players, Sorkin meticulously re-creates frantic phone calls, foul-mouthed rows and white-knuckle panic, as Wall Street fought to save itself.

Reviews

  • He has done a remarkable job in producing a lively account that will be hard for subsequent authors to beat
    Gillian Tett, FT

About the author

Andrew Ross Sorkin

Andew Ross Sorkin is the author of Too Big to Fail, which chronicled the 2008 financial crisis and won the 2010 Gerald Loeb Award for Best Business Book, and was shortlisted for the 2010 Samuel Johnson Prize and the 2010 Financial Times Business Book of the Year Award. Sorkin is a long-time journalist at The New York Times, the creator of DealBook, the New York Times's DealBook conference, and the TV drama Billions, and a television correspondent for CNBC's Squawk Box.
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