Ken Auletta

Ken Auletta’s Followers (99)

member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo

Ken Auletta


Born
in Brooklyn, The United States
April 23, 1942

Website

Twitter

Genre


Ken Auletta has written Annals of Communications columns and profiles for The New Yorker magazine since 1992. He is the author of eleven books, including five national bestsellers: Three Blind Mice: How the TV Networks Lost Their Way; Greed And Glory On Wall Street: The Fall of The House of Lehman; The Highwaymen: Warriors of the Information Super Highway; World War 3.0: Microsoft and Its Enemies; and Googled, The End of the World As We Know It, which was published in November of 2009.

Auletta has won numerous journalism honors. He has been chosen a Literary Lion by the New York Public Library, and one of the 20th Century's top 100 business journalists by a distinguished national panel of peers.

For two decades Auletta has been a national jud
...more

Average rating: 3.76 · 5,834 ratings · 601 reviews · 30 distinct worksSimilar authors
Googled: The End of the Wor...

3.67 avg rating — 3,196 ratings — published 2009 — 46 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Hollywood Ending: Harvey We...

4.12 avg rating — 1,291 ratings — published 2022 — 4 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Frenemies: The Epic Disrupt...

3.43 avg rating — 587 ratings10 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Greed and Glory on Wall Str...

3.85 avg rating — 272 ratings — published 1985 — 17 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Three Blind Mice: How the T...

3.84 avg rating — 136 ratings4 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
World War 3.0 : Microsoft a...

3.53 avg rating — 92 ratings — published 2001 — 9 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Backstory: Inside the Busin...

3.50 avg rating — 74 ratings — published 2003 — 11 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
The Highwaymen

3.86 avg rating — 56 ratings — published 1997 — 7 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
The Underclass

3.74 avg rating — 39 ratings — published 1982 — 6 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Media Man: Ted Turner's Imp...

3.53 avg rating — 40 ratings — published 2004 — 8 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
More books by Ken Auletta…
Quotes by Ken Auletta  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“Marcus Goldman in 1869 launched what would become Goldman, Sachs & Company and pioneered the use of what is known today as commercial paper. In return for lending a merchant, say, $900, Goldman would receive a written promise from the merchant to pay back $1,000. That paper could then be traded like a security.”
Ken Auletta, Greed and Glory on Wall Street: The Fall of the House of Lehman

“The first of the brothers to leave their home in search of fortune was Henry, then twenty-three and the oldest. Henry settled in this city of 4,000 citizens and 2,000 slaves. His two brothers soon followed, and in 1850 they established a trading and dry-goods business called Lehman Brothers.”
Ken Auletta, Greed and Glory on Wall Street: The Fall of the House of Lehman

“Robert Lehman—who often told his partners, “I bet on people”—made Lehman the driving financial force behind RCA and the birth of television, TWA, Pan Am, Hertz, several Hollywood studios, and various department store and oil and rubber giants. Lehman Brothers was at the epicenter of those business forces that have shaped not just the American economy but the American culture as well. By 1967 the House of Lehman was responsible for $3.5 billion in underwriting. In volume, Lehman was among the top four investment banks.”
Ken Auletta, Greed and Glory on Wall Street: The Fall of the House of Lehman

Polls

What nonfiction book should we read in 4Q23?

A Fever in the Heartland The Ku Klux Klan's Plot to Take Over America, and the Woman Who Stopped Them by Timothy Egan
A Fever in the Heartland: The Ku Klux Klan's Plot to Take Over America, and the Woman Who Stopped Them
Timothy Egan

A historical thriller by the Pulitzer and National Book Award-winning author that tells the riveting story of the Klan's rise to power in the 1920s, the cunning con man who drove that rise, and the woman who stopped them.

The Roaring Twenties--the Jazz Age--has been characterized as a time of Gatsby frivolity. But it was also the height of the uniquely American hate group, the Ku Klux Klan. Their domain was not the old Confederacy, but the Heartland and the West. They hated Blacks, Jews, Catholics and immigrants in equal measure, and took radical steps to keep these people from the American promise. And the man who set in motion their takeover of great swaths of America was a charismatic charlatan named D.C. Stephenson.

Stephenson was a magnetic presence whose life story changed with every telling. Within two years of his arrival in Indiana, he’d become the Grand Dragon of the state and the architect of the strategy that brought the group out of the shadows – their message endorsed from the pulpits of local churches, spread at family picnics and town celebrations. Judges, prosecutors, ministers, governors and senators across the country all proudly proclaimed their membership. But at the peak of his influence, it was a seemingly powerless woman – Madge Oberholtzer – who would reveal his secret cruelties, and whose deathbed testimony finally brought the Klan to their knees.

A FEVER IN THE HEARTLAND marries a propulsive drama to a powerful and page-turning reckoning with one of the darkest threads in American history.
 
  11 votes 31.4%

Hollywood Ending Harvey Weinstein and the Culture of Silence by Ken Auletta
Hollywood Ending: Harvey Weinstein and the Culture of Silence
Ken Auletta

Twenty years ago, Ken Auletta wrote one of the iconic New Yorker profiles for which he is famous, of the Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, who was then at the height of his powers. The profile created waves for exposing how volatile, even violent, Weinstein was to his employees and collaborators. But there was a much darker story that was just out of reach: rumors had long swirled that Weinstein was a sexual predator, but no one was willing to go on the record, and in the end Auletta and the magazine concluded they couldn’t close the case. But the story always nagged at him, and many years later, he was able to share his reporting notes and all that he knew with Ronan Farrow, and to cheer him along with Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey as all of them broke pioneering stories and wrote bestselling books.

But the story continued nagging him. Farrow, Twohey, and Kantor did a brilliant job of exposing the trail of assaults and their cover-up, but the larger questions remained: what was at the root of Weinstein’s monstrousness? How and why was it never checked? How does a man run the day-to-day operations of a company with hundreds of employees and revenues in the hundreds of millions of dollars and at the same time live a shadow life of sexual predation without ever being caught, for years and years? How much is this a story about Harvey Weinstein, and how much is this a story about Hollywood and power?

Ken Auletta has spent the last three years in pursuit of the answers, uncovering the mysteries beneath a film career unparalleled in Hollywood history for its combination of extraordinary business and creative success and a personal brutality and viciousness that left a trail of ruined lives in its wake. Hollywood Ending is an unflinching examination of Weinstein’s life and career. Not simply a prosecutor’s litany of crimes, it embeds them in the context of his overall business, his failures but also his outsized successes. To understand how Weinstein could behave as he did, we have to understand the power he wielded. Iconic film stars, Miramax employees and board members, old friends and family, and even the person who knew him best—Harvey’s brother Bob—all talked to Auletta at length. The result is not simply the portrait of a predator, it is a portrait of the power that allowed Weinstein to operate with such impunity for so many years, the spider web in which his victims found themselves trapped. To face the truth of the Weinstein story is to understand how many other spider webs no doubt still remain.
 
  8 votes 22.9%

Tiny Beautiful Things Advice from Dear Sugar by Cheryl Strayed
Tiny Beautiful Things: Advice from Dear Sugar
Cheryl Strayed

An anniversary edition of the bestselling collection of Dear Sugar advice columns written by the author of #1 New York Times bestseller Wild--featuring a new preface and six additional columns. Soon to be a Hulu Original series.

For more than a decade, thousands of people have sought advice from Dear Sugar--the pseudonym of bestselling author Cheryl Strayed--first through her online column at The Rumpus, later through her hit podcast, Dear Sugars, and now through her popular Substack newsletter. Tiny Beautiful Things collects the best of Dear Sugar in one volume, bringing her wisdom to many more readers. This tenth-anniversary edition features six new columns and a new preface by Strayed. Rich with humor, insight, compassion--and absolute honesty--this book is a balm for everything life throws our way.
 
  7 votes 20.0%

"I Am a Man" Chief Standing Bear's Journey for Justice by Joe Starita
"I Am a Man": Chief Standing Bear's Journey for Justice
Joe Starita

In 1877, Chief Standing Bear's Ponca Indian tribe was forcibly removed from their Nebraska homeland and marched to what was then known as Indian Territory (now Oklahoma), in what became the tribe's own Trail of Tears. "I Am a Man" chronicles what happened when Standing Bear set off on a six-hundred-mile walk to return the body of his only son to their traditional burial ground. Along the way, it examines the complex relationship between the United States government and the small, peaceful tribe and the legal consequences of land swaps and broken treaties, while never losing sight of the heartbreaking journey the Ponca endured. It is a story of survival---of a people left for dead who arose from the ashes of injustice, disease, neglect, starvation, humiliation, and termination. On another level, it is a story of life and death, despair and fortitude, freedom and patriotism. A story of Christian kindness and bureaucratic evil. And it is a story of hope---of a people still among us today, painstakingly preserving a cultural identity that had sustained them for centuries before their encounter with Lewis and Clark in the fall of 1804.

Before it ends, Standing Bear's long journey home also explores fundamental issues of citizenship, constitutional protection, cultural identity, and the nature of democracy---issues that continue to resonate loudly in twenty-first-century America. It is a story that questions whether native sovereignty, tribal-based societies, and cultural survival are compatible with American democracy. Standing Bear successfully used habeas corpus, the only liberty included in the original text of the Constitution, to gain access to a federal court and ultimately his freedom. This account aptly illuminates how the nation's delicate system of checks and balances worked almost exactly as the Founding Fathers envisioned, a system arguably out of whack and under siege today.

Joe Starita's well-researched and insightful account reads like historical fiction as his careful characterizations and vivid descriptions bring this piece of American history brilliantly to life.
 
  6 votes 17.1%

The Daily Coyote Story of Love, Survival, and Trust In the Wilds of Wyoming by Shreve Stockton
The Daily Coyote: Story of Love, Survival, and Trust In the Wilds of Wyoming
Shreve Stockton

A lavishly illustrated journal based on the author's experiences of raising an orphaned coyote documents the first year of their relationship, during which the author, the pup, and her cat shared an unusual life in a Wyoming log cabin.
 
  3 votes 8.6%

35 total votes
More...

Topics Mentioning This Author

topics posts views last activity  
100+ Books in 2025: Michael's 100 Books for 2010 68 200 Jan 14, 2011 01:34PM  
The Challenge Fac...: Dictionary Word of the Month-September Edition 43 61 Oct 19, 2018 03:58PM  
Booktastic Bookah...: About You Part 1 2018 7 21 Oct 24, 2018 03:49AM  
2025 Reading Chal...: Richo's Challenges to Get to 1,000 Books 83 455 Oct 28, 2018 05:12AM  
Nothing But Readi...: This topic has been closed to new comments. Level 7 of the Serious Reader Challenge for 2018 17 263 Nov 11, 2018 12:58PM  
2025 Reading Chal...: Richo's 365 books for 2018 944 645 Jan 06, 2019 03:57AM  
2025 Reading Chal...: Let's Turn Pages - 2018 2167 1666 Jan 12, 2019 04:17AM  


Is this you? Let us know. If not, help out and invite Ken to Goodreads.