A Few Books I Read and Found Helpful . . .

THE ACTORS

  1. Henry M. Paulson Jr., On the Brink: Inside the Race to Stop the Collapse of the Global Banking System. Business Plus, 2010, 478 pp.
  2. William R. Rhodes, Banker to the World. McGraw-Hill, 2011, 249 pp.
  3. William L. Silber, Volcker: The Triumph of Persistence. Bloomsbury Press, 2012, 300 pp. + 150 pp. of texts, notes, and documents.
  4. George Soros, The New paradigm for Financial Markets: The Credit Crisis of 2008 and What It Means. BBS, 2010, 162 pp.

THE CLASSICS

  1. Ken Auletta, Greed and Glory on Wall Street: The Fall of the House of Lehman. Random House, 1986, 282 pp.
  2. Michael Lewis, Liars’ Poker: Two Cities, True Greed. Hodder & Sloughton, 1989, 224 pp.

THE ACADEMICS

  1. John C. Coffee, Gatekeepers: The Professions and Corporate Governance. Oxford University Press, 2006, 390 pp.
  2. Howard Davies and David Green, Banking on the Future: The Fall and Rise of Central Banking. Princeton University Press, 2010.
  3. Howard Davies and David Green, Global Financial Regulation. Polity, 2008, 200 pp.
  4. Charles Goodhardt, Philipp Hartmann, David T. Llewellyn, Liliana Rojas-Suarez, and Steven Weisbro, Financial Regulation: Why, How and Where Now? Routledge (in association with the Bank of England), 2003.
  5. D. Quinn Mills, Wheel, Deal and Steel: Deceptive Accounting, Deceitful CEOs and Ineffective Reforms. Harvard Business School, FT Prentice Hall, 2003, 300 pp.
  6. Raghuram J. Rajan and Luigi Zingales, Saving Capitalism from the Capitalists: Unleashing ...

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