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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Stream of Consciousness Biography of Value Investor Graham, July 14, 1997
By A Customer
The adage "Don't judge a book by its cover" proves to be true for Janet Lowe's book about Ben Graham. In fact, after reading this book, the adage can be updated to "Don't judge a book by its cover, its subtitle, or its endorsements."
Let's start with the book's subtitle, "Lessons from the Dean of Wall Street." The subtitle makes it sound as if Ms. Lowe's book explains Mr. Graham's investment ideas. This impression is reinforced when you read the endorsements on the book's dust cover. There you'll find quotes from a handful of investment managers (including Warren Buffet of Berkshire Hathaway and John Bogle of the Vanguard Group) that extol the virture of Mr. Graham's ideas and the importance of Ms. Lowe's book.
Ms. Lowe's book turns out to be biography that intersperses some of Mr. Graham's ideas throughout its 230 pages. More pages are devoted to information about Mr. Graham's mistresses than to details about his investment ideas. Thankfully, the book is a quick read.
From the extensive endnotes that appear at the end of the book, it's evident that Ms. Lowe spent a great deal of time researching her subject. Unfortunately, her presentation of this information needs a better structure and more focus.
The book jumps back and forth through time, often repeating information that had been discussed earlier. This happened so frequently that I had to pause several times to figure out if I was re-reading a section.
Worse yet, Ms. Lowe seems to get lost in this time warp herself. At one point, she tells us that Mr. Graham's son was in his early teens in the mid-1960's and then, two pages later, tells us that the same son enrolled at Berkeley in 1963. Unless the son was a child prodigy (and we're not told that he was), both pieces of information can't possibly be correct.
A biography should concentrate on its subject matter. In this case, that would be Benjamin Graham. However, Ms. Lowe loses this focus. Do I need to know that Mr. Buffet read Mr. Graham's The Intelligent Investor when Mr. Buffet was 19? Maybe. Do I have to be told this two more times? I don't think so. And in the second half of the book, she talks so much about Mr. Buffet that I almost forgot who the book was about.
Then there's the inconsequential information that she includes. While investigating a subject, the researcher is always going to uncover interesting facts. The writer's task is to determine which ones are essential for the story and which ones to reserve for cocktail conversation. Ms. Lowe doesn't make this distinction. While I was happy to read that one of Mr.Graham's distant relatives made so much money by investing with him that she was able to buy her condo for cash, this anecdote doesn't further our understanding of the man or his ideas. We already know that he was successful investor.
Another distraction is her use of subchapter headings. When they're used properly, they help organize the information that you're reading. In Ms. Lowe's book, they're used so haphazardly and some times so frequently (in some chapters, they're used after every third paragraph) that they lose any signficance that they might have had.
If you're an investor looking for detailed information about Mr. Graham's theories, Ms. Lowe's book isn't the one to read. Better choices would be either Mr. Graham's The Intelligent Investor or his Security Analysis written with David Dodd. If you're an investor looking for information about Graham's life outside of investing, you might find something in Ms. Lowe's book.
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