After a record-breaking year in 2021, where I finished 23 books, 2022 saw a decrease to 15 completed books. I am not sure what to attribute the decline to. Perhaps I was busier in 2022 or the books I read were larger. One similarity between the two years is all the books were non-fiction with the majority focusing on the topic of finance. Nine of the 15 books were finance related. I bought them used from the site Better World Books for a total of $126. A few things I learned this year: the banking panic of 1907, the leadership of Winston Churchill, the history of hedge funds, and all about the human body. Below is a list of the books I read and a few I recommend.
The Algebra Of Happiness - Scott Galloway - Recommend - I read the book in one week. Galloway gives life advice on topics such as career, marriage, finances, health, etc... It’s an easy read I think most people would find interesting. He is a professor at NYU's Stern School of Business. His email exchange with one student (which went viral) is a fun read. You can read it here. He also has a podcast which is worth checking out. Though he can be pretty annoying at times and kind of preachy. So maybe try out a few episodes in case you get a bad one on your first listen.
The Panic Of 1907 - Robert Bruner and Sean Carr - Recommend - Most people know about the stock market crash in 1929 but there was another major financial crisis prior to that in 1907. During the 15 month crisis, the stock market collapsed, there were numerous bank failures, and very little government oversight into financial markets. In the early 1900s, there were dozens of bank failures each year. In 1907 alone, there were 25 failures. One day your bank is doing fine; the next day there is a run on the bank. By the time you get to the counter to withdraw your money it’s all gone. Pretty wild. At the time, there was no Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to protect your money so your were out of luck. Today the FDIC insures up to $250,000 in an account. The book reveals just how complex the financial system is and how it is all linked. The panic also led to the creation of the Federal Reserve. At the time there was no central bank to conduct monetary policy.
The Most Important Thing - Howard Marks - Recommend - A thought-provoking read that offers a lot of valuable financial insight. Marks discusses investment philosophy with lessons from his own career and breaks down concepts such as second-level thinking, risk assessment, market cycles, and tons more. I probably learned the most on investing from this book. Howard Marks is a famous investor who is well known in the finance industry. Net worth over $2 billion. Warren Buffet even recommends the book with a little quote on the front cover “This is that rarity, a useful book”.
The Body - Bill Bryson - Recommend - Another simple and easy read that breaks down different parts of the body. You’ll learn: Why you get pimples, how memories are categorized, the heart weighs less than a pound, each of us grows about 25 feet of hair in a lifetime, and the average person changes positions between 30 and 40 times in the course of a night. The body is bizarre so if you would like to understand it a bit better then pick up this book.
The Soul Of America - Jon Meacham - Focuses on turning points in American history. Civil War, Reconstruction, Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s, the fight for women’s rights, McCarthyism in the 1950s, etc… This was another great book.
The Splendid And The Vile - Erik Larson - Centers around Winston Churchill and London during the Blitz.
The Cyber Effect - Mary Aiken - Looks at how the Internet is shaping development and behavior, societal norms and values, children, safety, privacy. I didn’t care for this book.
Zero To One - Peter Thiel & Blake Masters - Deals with business development, innovation and entrepreneurship. Peter Thiel started PayPal, co-founded Palantir, and helped fund Facebook, Airbnb, Spotify, LinkedIn, and more.
Influence: The Psychology Of Persuasion - Robert B. Cialdini - Book highlights six principles of persuasion that are commonly and effectively used.
Confessions Of A Street Addict - Jim Cramer - Autobiography that centers around Cramer's work life and career. I like Jim Cramer, host of Mad Money on CNBC, but I would not recommend this book. I read one of his other books that focused more on the stock market. That was a better one.
A Little History Of Economics - Niall Kishtainy - Focuses on economic history and philosophies.
More Money Than God - Sebastian Mallaby - Looks at the history of the hedge funds.
The Man Who Solved The Market - Gregory Zuckerman - Biography on mathematician, Jim Simons. He is one of the greatest investors of all time. He founded a hedge fund that developed mathematical models and algorithms and made a killing from it. His net worth is over $20 billion.
Trillons - Robin Wigglesworth - Reveals the history of index funds and how they changed the stock market forever.
The Devil’s Casino - Vicky Ward - Centers on the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008.