Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

1929: Inside the Greatest Crash in History--and How It Shattered a Nation

Rate this book
From the bestselling author of Too Big to Fail, “the definitive history of the 2008 banking crisis,”* comes a spellbinding narrative of the most infamous stock market crash in history. With the depth of a classic history and the drama of a thriller, 1929 unravels the greed, blind optimism, and human folly that led to an era-defining collapse—one with ripple effects that still shape our society today.

In 1929, the world watched in shock as the unstoppable Wall Street bull market went into a freefall, wiping out fortunes and igniting a depression that would reshape a generation. But behind the flashing ticker tapes and panicked traders, another drama unfolded—one of visionaries and fraudsters, titans and dreamers, euphoria and ruin.

With unparalleled access to historical records and newly uncovered documents, New York Times bestselling author Andrew Ross Sorkin takes readers inside the chaos of the crash, behind the scenes of a raging battle between Wall Street and Washington and the larger-than-life characters whose ambition and naivete in an endless boom led to disaster. The dizzying highs and brutal lows of this era eerily mirror today’s world—where markets soar, political tensions mount, and the fight over financial influence plays out once again.

This is not just a story about money. 1929 is a tale of power, psychology, and the seductive illusion that “this time is different.” It’s about disregarded alarm bells, financiers who fell from grace, and skeptics who saw the crash coming—only to be dismissed until it was too late.

Hailed as a landmark book, Too Big to Fail reimagined how financial crises are told. Now, with 1929, Sorkin delivers an immersive, electrifying account of the most pivotal market collapse of all time—with lessons that remain as urgent as ever. More than just a history, 1929 is a crucial blueprint for understanding the cycles of speculation, the forces that drive financial upheaval, and the warning signs we ignore at our peril.

*The Atlantic Monthly

577 pages, Kindle Edition

First published October 14, 2025

8444 people are currently reading
43116 people want to read

About the author

Andrew Ross Sorkin

6 books606 followers
Andrew Ross Sorkin is The New York Timess chief mergers and acquisitions reporter and a columnist. Mr. Sorkin, a leading voice about Wall Street and corporate America, is also the editor of DealBook (nytimes.com/dealbook), an online daily financial report he started in 2001. In addition, Mr. Sorkin is an assistant editor of business and finance news, helping guide and shape the papers coverage.

Mr. Sorkin, who has appeared on NBC's Today show and on Charlie Rose on PBS, is a frequent guest host of CNBCs Squawk Box. He won a Gerald Loeb Award, the highest honor in business journalism, in 2004 for breaking news. He also won a Society of American Business Editors and Writers Award for breaking news in 2005 and again in 2006. In 2007, the World Economic Forum named him a Young Global Leader.

Mr. Sorkin began writing for The Times in 1995 under unusual circumstances: he hadnt yet graduated from high school.

Mr. Sorkin lives in Manhattan."

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
4,432 (46%)
4 stars
3,738 (39%)
3 stars
1,118 (11%)
2 stars
155 (1%)
1 star
83 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 755 reviews
Profile Image for Brendan (History Nerds United).
806 reviews713 followers
July 11, 2025
On the face of it, 1929 by Andrew Ross Sorkin gave me pause. Would it be too finance-y? Would there be concepts that make my head hurt? Would I just become even more worried about my 401k? Great news! No, no, and yes, but that's not his fault. Instead, you get a character driven tale of hubris, politics, and depression in both the literal and figurative sense.

I loved this book so much because Sorkin understands people and their relationships are what gets readers invested (you are dang right that pun was intended). The first issue with a book like this is that there are so many characters who need to be in it. Sorkin ingeniously tells the story chronologically with each chapter being a specific date while consistently starting the chapter with someone the reader is already familiar with. No one is wasted. Anyone you are introduced to in the first few chapters will come back later on and matter to the narrative. That way, Sorkin can ground the reader with a familiar face while explaining financial activities and perhaps adding a few more names to the book's Rolodex. The book even goes past 1929 which, admittedly, I thought was going to be a mistake. However, Sorkin quickly proves that the aftermath on his characters is just as important as the crash.

Sorkin, who wrote the acclaimed Too Big to Fail, also effortlessly immerses the reader in the financial shenanigans of the time period. I personally have a low tolerance for finance as a subject. However, the author gives you just enough to know what is going on without making you want to take a long nap. In fact, Sorkin makes sure to make the narrative mostly about the actions of his characters and the simple fact that no one knows exactly what the stock market will do. As is often said, show, don't tell.

Finally, I have a pet peeve of taking a historical event and forcing current events into it. Wonderfully, Sorkin never even hints at connecting 1929 to today. Don't get me wrong, he certainly provides plenty of information for the reader to make their own connections, but he never shoves it in the reader's face. This is about 1929 and its aftermath. He understood the assignment, and he nailed it.

(This book was provided as an advance reader copy by NetGalley and Viking Books.)
Profile Image for Tony.
513 reviews13 followers
December 14, 2025
1929 paints a vivid picture of the period surrounding the great stock market crash of that October and the ensuing onset of the Great Depression.  However, to the extent that Sorkin attempts to explain why these events occurred, I am not certain that he succeeds.  For instance, he illustrates how easy credit and loose regulations lead to the proliferation of trading on margin and its accompanying risks.  However, he never even attempts to explain why average Americans of that era were so obsessed with the stock market in the first place.  Similarly, the author seems to suggest that the 1932 banking crisis was precipitated by inaccurate rumors about one bank; surely, the situation was more complicated than that!  In sum, if you would like to learn about the times and major personalities of the era, 1929 is a highly enjoyable read.  However, do not expect this relatively slender volume to truly explain these momentous events.
Profile Image for Matt.
1,054 reviews31.1k followers
January 5, 2026
“No cities were bombed or torched in the fall of 1929, and no armies marched on Washington. There were no revolutions or attempted assassinations. No government buildings were taken over by angry mobs. The country faced no earthquakes or floods or fires or pandemics. All the factories remained standing. Most of the farms kept producing. Contrary to conventional wisdom, there was not even any significant loss of life. Popular accounts of despondent stock traders hurling themselves out of windows and leaping off rooftops painted an inaccurate picture… But daily life in America certainly felt different. To the nation, experiencing the implosion of the stock market felt like watching a heavyweight champion getting knocked out by an untested, unheralded amateur. It wasn’t the way the world was supposed to work…”
- Andrew Ross Sorkin, 1929: Inside the Greatest Crash in Wall Street History – and How it Shattered a Nation

When you look at the whole of American economic history, an unmistakable pattern emerges. Booms followed by busts. Optimism followed by alarm. When times are good, they are really good, at least for a select few. When times are bad, they are really bad, with the pain spread far more widely than the benefits.

Andrew Ross Sorkin’s 1929 tells the story of the most famous panic an American history: the infamous stock market crash of October 1929. Often heralded as the beginning of the Great Depression, Wall Street’s collapse was the result of an overheated market driven by a raging speculative fever that inflated stock values and convinced everyone from bankers to shoe-shine boys that generational wealth lay just ahead.

Written in a journalistic style, with a keen eye for characters, 1929 gives lie to the idea of rational markets. For as long as human beings are involved, irrationality is going to exist. One is even tempted to say that illogical emotionality – not simply irrationality but greed, blind optimism, and abject fear – are inherent parts of the system, the gears that keep things moving. Unregulated, these irrationalities keep causing the same results. Though this makes for good drama, it’s tough on the wallet.

***

Sorkin divides 1929 into two large sections. The first is set entirely during the titular year, beginning in February and ending in December. The second focuses on the aftermath of the crash in the years that followed. Each of these halves are further subdivided into datelined chapters, typically focusing on a single event during a particular day.

Throughout, Sorkin stays close to the participants, of which there are many. Included in the cast list are leaders of financial institutions, members of the New York Stock Exchange, Federal Reserve Board members, stockbrokers, speculators, politicians, and even Winston Churchill, who had a real knack for inserting himself into the historical flow.

The advantage of Sorkin’s approach is that it is incredibly entertaining to read. Presented novelistically, with set-pieces and dialogue, the pages simply fly. Sorkin also does a good job in accepting the complexities of individuals, rather than sorting them into the bins of “hero” or “villain.”

For example, a great deal of time is spent with Charles Mitchell, the chairman and chief executive officer of National City Bank. Mitchell wanted to bring stocks to the masses, used his own funds to try to stabilize the market, but also bore a lot of responsibility for out-of-control investing. Then there is Carter Glass, a United States Senator who tried to regulate the banking industry while maintaining his day job of super-gross-racist.

Sorkin’s portraits provide a fascinating glimpse of pre-regulation Wall Street, with its rampant self-dealing, somehow totally-legal stock pools, and journalistic hype-boys using the front pages of major newspapers to pump stock valuations.

***

While Sorkin’s style is propulsive, it comes with a drawback. Specifically, in sticking so close to the ground level, you lose a bit of the overall context. To be sure, the macroeconomic framework of the stock market crash can be teased out of the narrative, beginning with Calvin Coolidge’s laissez faire approach to the presidency, the tenor of the Roaring Twenties, and the absurd belief among investors that growth could be perpetual. Still, I would have appreciated a bit more effort in showing the big picture.

With that said, this is not meant as a comprehensive, systematic look at the Crash of 1929. Rather, it is something brisker and more accessible, a morality play set against a background of clattering stock tickers, secretive financial houses, and extremely powerful men.

***

Sorkin is uniquely suited to a book of this type. He is a financial columnist, a CNBC host, and cocreator of the show Billions. Sorkin also wrote Too Big to Fail, an account of the 2008 Wall Street meltdown that shares many of the same contours of the 1929 fiasco.

In both Too Big to Fail and 1929, Sorkin demonstrates his skill in turning an inherently sedentary activity – buying and selling financial instruments – into something kinetic and exciting. He is also able to give short, lucid explanations of oftentimes confusing concepts, such as short selling.

The bottom line is that one need not have attended business school before picking this up.

***

Though a sometimes-critic of the system, Sorkin is also firmly a part of it. To that end, he offers a surprisingly tepid conclusion about the disaster. In particular, he eschews the idea of regulation in favor of humility: “the humility to know that no system is foolproof, no market fully rational, and no generation exempt.”

This works very well as a framed quote a businessman might hang on the mahogany panels of his office wall, but utterly fails as public policy. People – as 1929 ably demonstrates – are always going to be people. They are driven by powerful self-interested impulses. They will treat the stock market as a casino. They will chase risk one day, and quail from it the next. They they will wreck a company, lose a person’s life savings, destroy an economy, put millions out of work, and walk away without regret, fully expecting a bonus.

In general, we accept that humans are fallible and often make choices harmful to themselves and others. That is why we have laws governing almost every aspect of life, from the height of the grass in your lawn to the penalties for murder.

But in the realm of business, laws and regulations are seen as harmful to profitmaking, especially by those who give money to the men and women who write the laws and regulations. As such, only the most overtly brazen activity is ever punished, and then typically by a fine. Behavior that should be criminal is instead accepted as a legitimate business practice. Humbly do I suggest that this could be changed, because there is no universal statute written into sacred stone saying we cannot punish bad businesspeople. Until the guy who loses billions of dollars is treated with the same legal force as the guy stealing a pack of gum from a convenience store, the age-old cycle will continue unabated.
Profile Image for Ryann.
143 reviews22 followers
November 2, 2025
I approached this book with an overview knowledge of the 1929 stock market crash in New York City. Andrew Sorkin took this historical event and provided a detailed look at the banks, and more importantly the specific people behind the Wall Street curtain that made the decisions that led to the downfall of many Americans and led the country into the Great Depression.

It begins with the tail end of the Coolidge Presidency and the rampant speculation and risky investments that were going unchecked on Wall Street. He guides you through the crisis that falls on Hoover’s lap and ends with Roosevelt and the accountability trials. A bonus story that I enjoyed was learning that Winston Churchill was an eyewitness. As the stock market was plummeting, a dinner party filled with the most prominent executives of NYC was being held for Churchill.

In every bookstore I’ve visited since its release, 1929 has had a featured display. I can say that the hype has been warranted and I highly recommend! This story was written so that even a financial novice like myself could follow along.
Profile Image for Brett Martin.
64 reviews18 followers
November 13, 2025
I learned so much from this book. If you work in finance or just have a general interest in it, I definitely recommend checking this one out. Hopefully we can learn from our past mistakes.
Profile Image for Blaine.
344 reviews39 followers
November 8, 2025
A fairly superficial history of the 1929 crash, written in a pedestrian, journalistic fashion. Much overrated in the reviews.

The main interest was the portraits of the rogues commonly known as financial geniuses of the era, pouring money into stock pools and syndications, pumping up the economy with excessively low interest rates, selling shares at a low price to their colleagues and the same shares at a high price to the public. All perfectly legal and ethical based on the rules of the day, but still dodgy enough that it had to be done quietly behind the scenes.

It was instructive however in considering how the future will regard today's masters of the universe in cryptocurrencies and in the AI/tech field as we see massive capital being invested in "compute" capacity, like fibre and and housing in the earlier years of this century and the railroads in the 19th.
Profile Image for Anita Pomerantz.
782 reviews201 followers
January 3, 2026
From an educational standpoint, I did appreciate Sorkin's efforts here. He paints a picture of both the financial situation of the times and the political influences that either exacerbated or mitigated the results.

It was definitely a worthwhile read. I'm becoming more interested in history, and this book filled in some gaps.

But, I also had a few issues. First, I think if you write a book about financial concepts, you need to go into a little more depth about them. Like just saying the word "speculation" repeatedly doesn't really explain to me what was going on. I have an MBA and am interested in financial matters, and I still had questions. Maybe they think a layperson would be too bored by it all, but it's hard to have an opinion if you don't know more exactly what people were doing.

The various stories about the "players" were interesting, but there is a lot of names. There is a very helpful guide to the people at the front of the book. Bookmark that because you're gonna need it. I would say that only a couple were really fleshed out to the point where you cared about their fate. But that was enough to hold my interest. While this book is seemingly marketed as narrative non-fiction, my personal opinion is that it didn't quite reach my bar for that. It's like a history book that uses good anecdotes. I did like the way each chapter is a date in time and that it was told chronologically - - that made the sequence of events very clear for even people who don't normally like history.

All in all - - recommended with a couple of reservations.
Profile Image for Alan Chrisman.
69 reviews66 followers
December 14, 2025
Crash of 1929 and the Great Depression. Average people encouraged to invest with as little as 10% their own money-rest loaned from banks. Like in 2008 banking crises, they gave them mortgages they couldn't afford. Warning for today, because as with tech bust in early 2000's, we could be headed for an AI bust with most people just struggling to keep up with daily costs.
Profile Image for Katarina.
250 reviews1 follower
October 28, 2025
*Audiobook via Spotify Premium*

Fantastically detailed writing. The author said he hoped he could show the detail and the humanity behind the 1929 crash, like Walter Lord did for the Titanic in A Night to Remember. Sorkin definitely succeeded.
163 reviews2 followers
November 3, 2025
Sorkin has written an interesting, character driven look at the greed, speculation, and ignored warnings that led to the 1929 crash and the following Great Depression. He provides this detailed account of the 1929 stock market crash by focusing on the human stories of the financiers, politicians, and ordinary people involved while, at the same time, drawing parallels between those events and today’s financial markets.

Winston Churchill said that “those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.” It’s difficult to not reflect on those words when reading this book.

Sorkin says in his Prologue …

“We all love a good story, a concise explanation of how the world works. We all love an easy buck. Temptation has driven human folly for centuries, whether the serpent in the Garden of Eden or the market manias of cryptocurrency or artificial intelligence. Each wave seduces us into thinking that we’ve learned from history and, this time, we can’t be fooled. Then it happens again.”
Profile Image for Dale Dewitt.
192 reviews5 followers
June 16, 2025
An in-depth analysis of the events of 1929 that led to the Great Depression. Mr Ross Sorkin does a great job of making the complicated narrative, with all its parts, easy to understand by creating a key list of characters in order to allow the reader to understand the sometimes complicated financial maneuvering. I enjoyed the read up until part 2 of the book, that is where i felt too much time was spent on the Mitchell trial and on the Morgan Senate hearings. the fast quick narrative style that was seen in the first section of the book seemed to languish a bit in the second part due to the play-by-play that was given. I learned a great many things and felt that I now have a better understanding of the market crash and its aftermath and effects. .

I received an ARC from NetGalley for my honest review.
Profile Image for JS.
668 reviews11 followers
October 23, 2025
This is an excellent book. It breaks down the circumstances that led to the Great Depression and the actions that extended it. And it does so without getting too academic or wonky. The author is great about turning the history into a compelling narrative that blew my mind at multiple turns. I thought I knew the basics of the crash, but I had no idea until this book. The greatest compliment I can give, reserved for the true greats, is that I bored my wife to death talking about it. So… high praise
Profile Image for Steve Peifer.
520 reviews30 followers
November 2, 2025
1929 Andrew Ross Sorkin

This is an amazingly well researched history of the Great Depression that moves like a thriller but warning: It will scare the hell out of you.

There are so many ominous parallels to current economic conditions that it will make stuffing cash in a mattress a reasonable choice.

Reasonable people can debate the causes of the Depression (buying securities on credit, ill advised tariffs, irrational exuberance) but one thing is sure: no one knew what to do.

It’s so well written but it will keep you up at night.
24 reviews2 followers
November 13, 2025
Dry and lacking a broad perspective

Sorkin has clearly done a lot of research and tells the story how he wants. The book did not give an overarching synopsis of the crash and is more of a day to day of who did what and said what. It seems the book would be appreciated more by someone with a previous grasp on the politics and personalities involved during this time period but to me it lacked any sort of scope. Details and people are mentioned that have nothing to do with the crash or the shattering of a nation but instead seem like just fun(?) anecdotes during that time period. I didn’t find a cohesive theme or conclusion from this book but more of a run on manuscript of the events.
Profile Image for Dan Leiser.
75 reviews5 followers
November 8, 2025

A wonderfully detailed narrative of the hysterical rise and crash of the 20s unregulated stock market bankers. And ultimately the unfortunate realization of this book is that those architects of financial crisis, crashes, and depressions have never been held responsible for the worlds they created and destroyed.

Whether intentionally or not, it’s a sad reflection of our current state right now. Maybe when the trillion dollars that is being passed back and forth between a few companies like a pooled investment scheme crashes we’ll have another opportunity to punish those dark architects of our ruin.

Some other “fun” observations

Lamont, a fascist curious leader of an organization. Who seemed to love Mussolini and flirting with Hitler.

Lamont who was implicated in coup attempts of the US government in the business plot.

An unregulated republican led government led to economic turmoil that democrats have to clean up.
Profile Image for Simonas.
236 reviews139 followers
December 31, 2025
Tikrai už storry tellingą 5*. Į didžiausią finansų griūtį 1929-aisiais pažvelgta per dalyvavusių veiksme prizmę - tai daugiau žmonių asmeninės istorijos, nei ekonominė analizė. Labai įdomu koks buvo politikų, prezidento, bankų vadovų elgesys. Visas tekstas net arčiau grožinio nei non-fiction.
Profile Image for Sara H.
21 reviews
January 5, 2026
Extremely well researched and informative, but engaging narrative about how the 1929 crash stock market crash evolved into a new system of American society.
Profile Image for Ben Becker.
2 reviews1 follower
December 24, 2025
Caught in the middle of wanting to be as informative as a textbook and engaging as a work of fiction, it doesn’t really do a good job of being either.
144 reviews
October 19, 2025
1929

It is no surprise that Andrew Ross Sorkin wrote such a powerful living history of the 1929 crash aftermath. All the key players came to life in 3 dimensions and it was a gift indeed. I intended to savor it much longer, but I couldn’t put it down so it only lasted a couple of days. What a gift to take in his 8 yrs of research.
88 reviews
October 21, 2025
This book captures the stock market crash of 1929 and the early years of the Great Depression in searing detail. Sorkin’s astute analysis challenges the conventional wisdom of the causes and circumstances of the Depression in a vital way.
4 reviews
October 27, 2025
Incredible research and insights

The work that Andrew Ross Sorkin and his team put into this book are, alone, worth the read. Piecing it all together, and making sense of it all, make “1929” one of the greatest American history books perhaps of all time.
Profile Image for Stephen Drew.
376 reviews8 followers
Want to read
October 12, 2025
For personal reference

“I read an advance copy of Andrew Sorkin’s new book ‘1929’. Like ‘Too Big to Fail’, 1929 puts you in the room as the events leading up to the crash and the Great Depression are born and develop. You get to understand the history, meet the players, and watch history unfold.

It’s a great read for anyone interested in investing, markets, history, economics, government, politics, and
I have recommended only a few books on @X. This is a great one. Not to be missed.” -Bill Ackman
Profile Image for Douglas Hayman.
2 reviews1 follower
November 14, 2025
I like ARS and respect his intelligence, but I must be truthful - I found the book to be boring. Too many names (even though he included a glossary of names), and entirely too much minutia. I found myself counting down the pages until the crash occurred. Not enough description of how John Q Public dealt with and weathered the storm. I gave it 3 stars, due to the effort that ARS put into the book regarding detail. Other than that, I found the book to be a snoozer. Sorry ARS!
Profile Image for Dave Reads.
330 reviews21 followers
November 9, 2025
Dave's Summary

Andrew Ross Sorkin’s "1929: Inside the Greatest Crash in Wall Street History and How It Shattered a Nation" explores the greed, corruption, and arrogance that led to the market collapse of 1929. Drawing from private papers, Federal Reserve records, and firsthand accounts, Sorkin recreates the chaos of an era when speculation ruled and there was very little oversight. He recalls a world where bankers manipulated prices, politicians accepted bribes, and the wealthy lived extravagantly while the public bore the losses. The New York Times reporter shows how personal ambition and reckless risk-taking brought down not only fortunes but also public faith in capitalism itself.

The book also looks at the deeper human story behind the financial ruin. Sorkin portrays a country shocked into doubt, unsure if the economic system it trusted could survive. He traces how weak banks, poor leadership, and blind optimism magnified the crash’s effects, leaving ordinary Americans devastated while leaders like Herbert Hoover struggled to respond. Yet Sorkin ends with a reminder that human nature, including hope, greed, and overconfidence, always repeats itself. The 1929 crash, he argues, wasn’t just about money. It was about our tendency to forget hard lessons once the pain fades.

Top Takeaways

- Greed and speculation drove the 1929 market to collapse, exposing deep corruption on Wall Street.
- Weak banking systems and poor government oversight made the financial crash far worse.
- Leaders like Herbert Hoover failed to act decisively, deepening public fear and economic decline.
- The crash shattered America’s trust in its financial institutions and capitalist system.
- Sorkin argues that human nature—greed, hope, and overconfidence—ensures financial crises will keep repeating.
Profile Image for Owen Rees.
55 reviews3 followers
October 26, 2025
It pains me to give this book 3 stars because I loved Too Big To Fail so much, but this one just wasn’t as good. I didn’t find the story nearly as exciting and the characters nearly as exciting as those in Sorkin’s first book. Maybe my perception of the book is due to the fact that these events happened nearly a hundred years ago, and as such I find them more difficult to imagine.

Sorkin’s research and writing is top notch. Maybe more focus on market action would have kept me engaged; I found those moments more compelling than the character descriptions.

It’s still a good book, and I’d recommend it to readers who enjoy Wall Street reporting. But it’s not in the same realm as Too Big To Fail.
Profile Image for Gavin Lichtenstein.
2 reviews4 followers
December 29, 2025
A throughly interesting and fascinating book that I highly recommend — a book I couldn’t put down going from knowing little about the “major players” to being deeply invested in their stories that Sorkin masterfully tells. My criticism is shared among others — I felt the book missed an opportunity to tell a deeper story about the human experience during the depression to understand life in our country during that time period better rather than the perspectives of major players. Again — I adored this book and hope others read it too.
Profile Image for M.
1,554 reviews8 followers
December 13, 2025
I chose the audiobook-get ready to be scared…The book is about the stock market crash of 1929 with historical “hints” of today! I learned quite a bit about what ended the “roaring twenties”, bankers, credit lines, “stock tips”, borrowed money, run on the banks, deception, the beginning of regulations, stock market high and lows and maybe I should keep my money in my mattress-haha. So many parallels for today. Enjoy
Profile Image for &#x1f63c;jiriguru.
221 reviews
November 29, 2025
重现1929年股市大崩盘的前因后果。读完这本书会发现跟2008年的金融危机背后的根源是非常相似的:借债投资、集体盲目乐观对泡沫经济视而不见、内幕交易、政府监管力度极弱,当然,还有人性的贪婪。

一百年过去,这些问题改善了吗?当然没有。即便是有片面的修复,也会因为多方利益角力而最终回到原点。阳光之下无新事。再次崩盘只是时间问题。

Steve Bannon 说让美国再次伟大,就是要回到1930年代的美国。但那时的美国明明在经历1929股市大崩盘之后的经济大萧条,普通民众生活艰苦。为什么在MAGA制度设计者眼里那时的美国却是「最伟大」的?联想到之前讲法西斯政治体制的书,就会有答案。
7 reviews
January 6, 2026
4.2/5. This was a wonderful read and provides a great history of the lead-up and aftermath to the 1929 crash. Although it’s nonfiction, it is written in an incredibly narrative, page-turning fashion. Must read for anyone who loves financial markets and history.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 755 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.