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OverviewThe dramatic tale of the man who created the modern city--and ended up at the center of America's first corporate scandal Full Product DetailsAuthor: John F Wasik (Managing Director of the New Consumer Institute)Publisher: Palgrave MacMillan Imprint: Palgrave MacMillan Dimensions: Width: 13.90cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 21.00cm Weight: 0.290kg ISBN: 9780230609525ISBN 10: 023060952 Pages: 270 Publication Date: 01 December 2008 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Out of Stock Indefinitely Availability: Awaiting stock Table of ContentsReviewsBrilliant . . . brings Insull back to complicated life, and should revive interest in a forgotten giant. -- Chicago Sun-Times [A] focused look at one of the most interesting historical figures you've never heard of . . . a fascinating cautionary tale. -- Fortune Does a fine job of telling the early story of utilities, moguls and scandal. -- Chicago Tribune One of the most magnetic and powerful con artists of the Great Depression was Sam Insull. Patron of the arts, philanthropist and Thomas Edison's right hand, he shafted thousands of investors large and small. . . . I found the work of John Wasik not only personally enthralling but an informal history of that traumatic time. --Studs Terkel [A] bittersweet biography of one of the titans of American industry, business and finance . . . Highly readable. . . . -- Fort Worth Star-Telegram Wasik writes well, and Insull is a complex man whose life and times makes worthwhile reading. -- Publishers Weekly <br> Bloomberg News columnist John Wasik points out in a new biography, Merchant of Power, Insull started as the financial manager for a big man--not Ken Lay, but Thomas Edison. . . . --The New York Sun <br> Wasik [has] taken his cue from current corporate scandals such as Enron and WorldCom in deciding to pluck Insull from semiobscurity, as many of Insull's contemporaries (including FDR) believed him to be guilty (he was acquitted) of orchestrating the first large-scale corporate deception. -- Library Journal Brilliant . . . brings Insull back to complicated life, and should revive interest in a forgotten giant. -- Chicago Sun-Times [A] focused look at one of the most interesting historical figures you've never heard of . . . a fascinating cautionary tale. -- Fortune Does a fine job of telling the early story of utilities, moguls and scandal. -- Chicago Tribune One of the most magnetic and powerful con artists of the Great Depression was Sam Insull. Patron of the arts, philanthropist and Thomas Edison's right hand, he shafted thousands of investors large and small. . . . I found the work of John Wasik not only personally enthralling but an informal history of that traumatic time. --Studs Terkel [A] bittersweet biography of one of the titans of American industry, business and finance . . . Highly readable. . . . -- Fort Worth Star-Telegram Wasik writes well, and Insull is a complex man whose life and times makes worthwhile reading. -- Publishers Week Author InformationJohn F. Wasik is one of America's most prominent business and finance journalists and the author of nine books on investing. His column for Bloomberg News, the world's third largest news service, is read in more than 400 newspapers worldwide in five continents. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |