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Overview2008 didn't collapse the world. It changed how the world trusted itself. The year did not arrive with a single breaking point. There was no clean beginning, no obvious ending, no clear line where stability stopped and crisis began. Instead, 2008 unfolded as a realization - quiet, disorienting, and impossible to reverse once understood. Life continued. But belief changed. 2008: The Year the World Slipped is a gripping narrative history of the moment confidence fractured - not just in markets or institutions, but in the idea that modern systems were permanent, reliable, and self-correcting. This book does not chase headlines or overwhelm the reader with statistics. It tells the story of how 2008 felt - inside homes, behind glowing screens, and beneath everyday routines that suddenly carried doubt. The crisis is experienced not as a single event, but as a psychological shift that rewired how the world understood risk, trust, progress, and authority. Markets faltered. Institutions survived - but emerged changed. Optimism became cautious. Stability felt conditional. Through cinematic, chapter-driven storytelling, this book explores how the illusion of endless growth took hold, how debt stopped feeling dangerous, how complexity masked fragility, and how risk quietly became systemic. It traces the moment confidence cracked, the month that redefined the word crisis, and the era of intervention that saved systems while fracturing public trust. But this is not just a story about economics. It is about the emotional consequences of systemic failure. This book examines how the shock spread globally, why distance stopped offering protection, and how globalization revealed itself as fragile rather than strong. It explores why culture turned darker and more ironic, why technology accelerated without waiting for consent, and why politics became burdened with expectations it could not fulfill. Most of all, it captures the aftermath - the part history often rushes past. The subtle changes in posture. The hesitation that replaced faith. The normalization of vigilance. The moment calm became conditional. Readers who lived through 2008 will recognize themselves in these pages - not through dates or charts, but through feeling. Through the sense that something fundamental shifted, even when daily life appeared to resume. Through the realization that trust, once fractured, does not fully return to its original shape. Readers encountering the year for the first time will understand why so much of the anxiety, skepticism, and unrest of the following decade traces back to this moment - not because the world broke, but because it learned how exposed it already was. This is not a technical finance book. It is not a political argument. It is not a prediction. It is a portrait of a year that changed how the modern world believes in itself. Written in calm, ominous, narrative nonfiction prose, 2008: The Year the World Slipped is Book 9 in a decade-spanning series exploring the years that quietly reshaped modern life. Not the end of the world. The year the ground shifted - and never fully settled again. The world didn't collapse in 2008. It learned how easily it could. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Julian MercerPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Volume: 9 Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.10cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.272kg ISBN: 9798279271788Pages: 200 Publication Date: 21 December 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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