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Every Man a Speculator: A History of Wall Street in American Life Kindle Edition


"Big, boisterous, biting, and brilliant, this cultural history of Wall Street exposes Americans' naughty ambition to worship both God and mammon." —Walter A. McDougall, Pulitzer Prize–winning author
Americans have experienced a love-hate relationship with Wall Street for two hundred years. Long an object of suspicion, fear, and even revulsion, the Street eventually came to be seen as an alluring pathway to wealth and freedom. Steve Fraser tells the story of this remarkable transformation in a brilliant, masterfully written narrative filled with colorful tales of confidence men and aristocrats, Napoleonic financiers and reckless adventurers, master builders and roguish destroyers. Penetrating and engrossing, this is an extraordinary work of history that illuminates the values and the character of our nation.
"A rollicking history . . . Fraser affords us a panoramic view of decades of high endeavor and low greed." —Harold Evans, The New York Times Book Review
"Steve Fraser's remarkable book on Wall Street explores nothing less than the history of capitalist culture in the United States." —Sean Wilentz, Dayton-Stockton Professor of History, Princeton University
"Written with verve, passion, and a remarkable command of vast historical literature, Every Man a Speculator illuminates Americans' tortured relationship with Wall Street, from the days of Alexander Hamilton to the bubbles and frauds of the last few years." —Eric Foner, DeWitt Clinton Professor of History, Columbia University
"An illuminating tour of how the United States has perceived its financial center over two centuries through the eyes of its political leaders, novelists, moviemakers, preachers, cartoonists, ordinary citizens and a host of others." —The Washington Post

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Wall Street is a window into the soul of America and a battleground for a clash of the nation's values. So writes Steve Fraser, author of the epic book Every Man a Speculator. Fraser sets out to chronicle not so much the history of the "Street" itself, but its place in American society. Since the founding of United States, he says, Wall Street has been the place where Americans have wrestled with their beliefs about work and play, democracy and capitalism, gambling and investment, equality and freedom, God and mammon, heroes and villains.

This is an ambitious, fascinating tale peopled with infamous confidence men, cold-hearted fraudsters, and ruined speculators, through whose eyes Fraser tells virtually an alternative history of America. The 721-page book starts with William Duer, the country's original market swindler, who manipulated government bonds after the Revolution and died in debtors' prison. Duer's frauds left a deep suspicion of Wall Street among many of America's Founding Fathers and the general public. That suspicion only intensified, Fraser writes, after the panic of 1873, which Mark Twain satirized in his novel The Gilded Age, and the 1929 crash, after which Wall Street came under public supervision for the first time. After World War II, the Street staged a remarkable turnaround, as its "wise men" became key figures behind the Marshall Plan, NATO, the World Bank, and the International Monetary Fund. Today, despite the dot-com crash and corporate-fraud scandals, Fraser writes that Wall Street has still managed to retain a positive image in America's new "shareholder society." But he concludes on a dark tone expressing concerns about "gathering thunderclouds of world economic disturbance." He warns that any future market crash could plunge the Street back into disgrace while also reviving the political extremism and fascism of the 1930s. Fraser's elegantly written book manages to be both entertaining and thought-provoking. --Alex Roslin

From Booklist

*Starred Review* Writer, historian, and editor Fraser tells the story of Wall Street from its birth, where once an actual wall was erected by Dutch colonists to stave off invasion by the British. From the beginning, public culture alternately reviled and embraced the financial goings-on in this district, its people seen as confidence men trading on the misery of others more often than as prodigious builders of wealth. Fraser wisely treads softly on the machinations of late to focus, for instance, on the Gilded Age, where those men known as the Four Horsemen--Cornelius Vanderbilt, Daniel Drew, Jay Gould, and James Fisk--became scoundrels of heroic proportion. Lest we forget, he reminds us that the panics and subsequent depressions of 1837, 1857, and 1873 were just as deeply felt as the Great Depression would be in the next century. This is one place where history repeats itself over and over: a major terrorist bomb attack occurred September 16, 1920, and the first corporate raiders were demonized as "white sharks" in the 1950s. Fraser gives a thorough analysis of this scandal-ridden menagerie as reflected in books, movies, and the political arena. David Siegfried
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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