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  • Business Adventures: Twelve Classic Tales from the World of Wall Street
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Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5
5,261 global ratings
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4 star
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2 star
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Business Adventures: Twelve Classic Tales from the World of Wall Street

Business Adventures: Twelve Classic Tales from the World of Wall Street

byJohn Brooks
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Top positive review

Positive reviews›
LF
4.0 out of 5 starsA classic that presents useful lessons for today's business world.
Reviewed in the United States on April 26, 2016
While it would be easy to criticize Business Adventures, a book first published generations ago, for detailing business stories that took place generations ago, the book still gives some insight useful for today’s business world.

Strengths. This book covers many well-known companies that would probably be recognized by people who were baby boomers or older. The book covers a wide range of industries including automotive, aerospace, office equipment, and utilities.

While strategy books often cover the good decisions good companies make and the poor decisions that doom failing companies, Business Adventures also adds in some poor decisions good companies make. The Edsel chapter features Ford making a poor decision in releasing a new product. There is even a chapter about G.E., a very well known company, which is used to display how poor communication can having devastating effects on a company’s employees.

Business decisions are not made inside of a vacuum. Business Adventures provides useful information about the events leading up to decisions. When telling about the crash of ‘62, it tells how the delay in getting in orders precipitated panic that led to big sell offs.

In the Piggly Wiggly case, the author brings to light the idea of corners in the stock market and how they impact businesses. Personally, this was a very interesting topic to delve into and learn more about as the book reveals how one wealthy businessman was able to upheave the stock market for a period of time and go so far as to create his own little private stock market (which consisted entirely of stocks for his company). In this very same case, the author also explains how Piggly Wiggly was the first instance of what is known as the modern day supermarket, another fact which really stood out when reading this chapter.

Another great point to mention about Business Adventures is the fact that the stories are presented in a very casual and interesting way. When Piggly Wiggly’s owner is described as carrying wads of money in his pockets because his suitcase was too full, a slight sense of comedy arises. This is one of the better features of the book as it keeps the reader hooked by entertaining them rather than throwing a bunch of tedious factual information about various companies and their successes/failures.

Weaknesses. As mentioned earlier, most of the companies featured would be recognized by those who were baby boomers or older. Readers looking to learn about newer companies will need to look elsewhere. There are a few companies that are acknowledged in the text that do stand out even today. However, all of the information being provided about those companies is outdated.

At times the book can get bogged down into minute details that do not add to the development of the chapter. This happens quite a few times in the Edsel chapter when the author goes into details of the many key players in the Edsel’s development and failure. This can also be seen in the G.E. chapter where there is constant mention of the “wink” which represents how lax the company was about its corporate policy 20.5.

Some people may not appreciate the style of the book as it explores the successes and failures of many different corporations rather than sticking to just one specific case. However, the stories of this carry enough lessons that even readers today can gain insight from it. Evidence of this is that it is recommended by a founder of a tech company (Bill Gates) and holding company focusing on large cap companies (Warren Buffet).
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7 people found this helpful

Top critical review

Critical reviews›
JustinHoca
VINE VOICE
2.0 out of 5 starsWay too dense, needed massive editing in 1960s and especially today.
Reviewed in the United States on July 8, 2023
Business Adventures by John Brooks

I bought this Kindle book based on the quote I saw from Bill Gates that it was recommended by Warren Buffett as "the best business book I've ever read." I now think this may in some way be apocryphal. Gates' nerdiness and odd literary tendencies have been documented elsewhere, and I could see why he might have found the "rollicking narratives" entertaining and interesting. But Gates' stating that "the prose is superb" is nonsense. The book is a series of essays that were published in The New Yorkers in the 1960s. I used to subscribe to The New Yorker and I can say that the editing of such essays has since improved dramatically as it appears these were untouched from the author to the printing press. The book wouldn't be so bad if it were cleaned up of superfluous detail, but it's two stars at it is.

I am a trained economist and avid reader of history and I found the essays document some important people and companies that help explain some modern context. Details about the tax code in the 1950s and 1960s, a collusion case, the late 1960s pressure on the Bretton Woods system (that eventually caused its collapse), a biography of David E. Lilienthal, to give examples. Some essays read like MBA competition case studies- the Xerox chapter and the tale of Ford's expensive failure with its Edsel model. Essays on the ups and downs of the stock market and currencies may have pulled back the curtain some on financial markets that remained a mystery to the average American, who was much less likely to participate in the markets back then (taxes and capital controls were much different than today).

I'm not sure to whom I would recommend it other than employees of the various companies mentioned in the book that still exist. Two stars.
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From the United States

JustinHoca
VINE VOICE
2.0 out of 5 stars Way too dense, needed massive editing in 1960s and especially today.
Reviewed in the United States on July 8, 2023
Verified Purchase
Business Adventures by John Brooks

I bought this Kindle book based on the quote I saw from Bill Gates that it was recommended by Warren Buffett as "the best business book I've ever read." I now think this may in some way be apocryphal. Gates' nerdiness and odd literary tendencies have been documented elsewhere, and I could see why he might have found the "rollicking narratives" entertaining and interesting. But Gates' stating that "the prose is superb" is nonsense. The book is a series of essays that were published in The New Yorkers in the 1960s. I used to subscribe to The New Yorker and I can say that the editing of such essays has since improved dramatically as it appears these were untouched from the author to the printing press. The book wouldn't be so bad if it were cleaned up of superfluous detail, but it's two stars at it is.

I am a trained economist and avid reader of history and I found the essays document some important people and companies that help explain some modern context. Details about the tax code in the 1950s and 1960s, a collusion case, the late 1960s pressure on the Bretton Woods system (that eventually caused its collapse), a biography of David E. Lilienthal, to give examples. Some essays read like MBA competition case studies- the Xerox chapter and the tale of Ford's expensive failure with its Edsel model. Essays on the ups and downs of the stock market and currencies may have pulled back the curtain some on financial markets that remained a mystery to the average American, who was much less likely to participate in the markets back then (taxes and capital controls were much different than today).

I'm not sure to whom I would recommend it other than employees of the various companies mentioned in the book that still exist. Two stars.
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straight talk
2.0 out of 5 stars It is a boring & tedious reading if a reader has any degree ...
Reviewed in the United States on April 20, 2015
Verified Purchase
The essence of the whole book can be summarized in less than 20 pages, but the book is 441 pages (excluding Index) long. It is a boring & tedious reading if a reader has any degree of significant business experience. The book goes into many, boring gory descriptions of unnecessary & irrelevant details such as wall colors, building heights, description of someone's study, etc and key point of the topic description is hard to pick up.

The book has 12 topics including "gossips behind Edsel", federal income tax, 'Texas Sulphur insider trading legal battle". "Xerox", "customer service", "price fixing story of GE", and six other topics.

The story of Xerox, for example, tells how dry-copying technology got developed into business as Xerox and covers time period till ~ 1965 time frame when Xerox had a MONOPOLY in dry copying machine, and gouged customer for what it can charge & get by with. The chapter does NOT go into post 1965 timeframe when Xerox wanted to diversify, went after computer business & blew billions, went after numerous M&A & blew another billions, went after financial services business, and blew some more billions of dollars. I found the books' coverage of Xerox story to be very primitive, elementary & superficial.

Same goes for GE, and other chapters. All in all, I feel that spending many tens of hours reading this book cover to cover was a wasted effort.
3 people found this helpful
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MB
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing and Frustrating
Reviewed in the United States on August 13, 2014
Verified Purchase
As an investor and large fan of Warren Buffett's I heard that this was one of his favorite books and so quickly bought it. I have to say I was very disappointed. In fact, this is probably the first book I have read where I was actually frustrated by the content. I read only two chapters and, while parts were interesting, the level of detail can be overwhelming (and frankly boring), and as another reviewer said, there is a real lack of analysis in the book that prevented me from gaining anything useful. I kept searching for the deeper meaning I assumed Buffett was hinting at by giving his approval, all to no avail.

While detailed and well-written, the chapters lacked (or lost along the way) any semblance of a thesis. After reading the first chapter on the massive fluctuation in the stock market, I was left wondering what the point was, if there were any lessons to be taken from this. I don't necessarily think the date of a book or its subject matter means that the lessons are dated: The same psychological tendencies of people have lead to manias and bubbles for hundreds of years, but I took no lasting lessons from this book. It was a frustrating read to say the least and a surprising recommendation (at least for me) from one of the investing greats.
11 people found this helpful
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parallel
2.0 out of 5 stars 1968! It was written in 1968
Reviewed in the United States on September 26, 2021
Verified Purchase
By updating the cover and slapping a blurb by Slate on the cover, whoever re-released this was apparently hoping people would buy this book based on Bill Gates recommendation. But the most recent information in this book comes from 1968. If you’re interested in why Xerox is going gangbusters in that year or the technicalities of insider trading in 1960 or how a dip in the stock market was dealt with in 1962, by all means this is your book. The writer is good at explaining the intricacies of his topic, but I question the relevance of much of what he writes when he discusses tax rates of 70%.
4 people found this helpful
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DT
2.0 out of 5 stars Dated and too long
Reviewed in the United States on June 21, 2022
Verified Purchase
I found it difficult to get through this book. I didn’t realize it was written in the ‘50s and updated in the ‘60s. Though the stories are interesting, the writing is often too detailed and verbose and Brooks lost me numerous times. It was just too long and dry.
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James
2.0 out of 5 stars A boring read….
Reviewed in the United States on June 14, 2021
Verified Purchase
I bought this book because of the glowing reviews, but…..this book is dead boring. Way, way too much detail and minutia about events that aren’t all that exciting anyway.
If you like to geek out at a seriously deep level of detail about pretty nerdy economic stuff, then this is your book. If you’re looking for any kind of entertainment, I’d look elsewhere.
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bekx
2.0 out of 5 stars Boring read. Unnecessarily long.
Reviewed in the United States on January 30, 2020
Verified Purchase
If it was not for Bill's recommendation, this book would not be anywhere close to as many sales. In fact, i will take Bills taste of books with a grain of salt after this. Though the book is informative, the author could have made it half its length while communicating just as effectively. It's too wordy and rippled with back to back compound sentences, sometimes making reader lose track. Skip it and read an online summary of the book instead for the info
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ScubaGirl
2.0 out of 5 stars Over rated and outdated
Reviewed in the United States on July 20, 2019
Verified Purchase
I got this book when I read that Warren Buffett and Bill Gates both liked the book. OVERRATED! The stories are from several decades ago and writing is not that engaging although I have only read about 100 pages. It would be a great book if it was better written and covered 12 recent business stories.
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T.H.
2.0 out of 5 stars Wordy and dated
Reviewed in the United States on June 4, 2020
Verified Purchase
Don't believe Bill Gates when he says this is a great business book. The author never gets to the finish line when trying to make a point. You keep waiting but it never gets there. Frustrating.
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Tara
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointed
Reviewed in the United States on May 30, 2018
Verified Purchase
Bill Gates and Warren Buffet have spoken very highly of the book. I've read some really good business books so I figured, why not, let's add another to the collection. Boy was I disappointed. I couldn't get through it all. It's hard to understand who exactly the intended audience is for. It's boring. Meh!
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