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The best history books about why today’s financial world is the way it is

I was recently asked to list some of the books I think are the best for understanding past markets and their relationship to what is happening today. See the full article here.

ThinkAdvisor Interview

“After two weeks of euphoric trading and setting new records, the market suddenly pivoted on a dime and plunged 115 points, soared back up and then soared back down to the closing bell, leaving everybody aghast.”

Read the full interview.

Philadelphia Inquirer Interview

“These events were red flashing lights on the console of an overheated, undermaintained, poorly-understood machinery.

We haven’t fixed any of this.”

Read the full interview.

Henriques to Speak at NICE Actimize ENGAGE Client Forum

“Diana B. Henriques, also the author of “A First-Class Catastrophe: The Road to Black Monday, the Worst Day in Wall Street History”, was a member of The New York Times team that was a Pulitzer finalist for its coverage of the 2008 financial crisis. A contributing writer for The New York Times, which she joined in 1989, she was previously a staff writer for Barron’s magazine, a Wall Street correspondent for The Philadelphia Inquirer, and an investigative reporter for The Trenton (N.J.) Times. In May 2017, HBO released its film-length adaptation of The Wizard of Lies, starring Robert De Niro as Madoff, with Henriques playing herself. The film was nominated for four Emmy awards, including ‘best picture.'”

Full event details (invitation only).

Library Journal Review

“The author’s journalistic storytelling will bring a deeper understanding of Black Monday to all readers the same way Andrew Sorkin’s ‘Too Big To Fail’ did for the 2008 crisis.”

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Awards Daily Interview

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“I just kept repeating that. Be yourself. You’re not playing anybody. You’re just being Diana Henriques.”

Read the full interview here.

LA Screenwriter Interview

“…to say that our current political scene is populated by con men is actually an insult to con men. They have a lot more self-control and a lot more strategic thinking than we’ve been seeing lately.”

Read the full interview here.

Stacking Benjamins Interview

Joe Saul-Sehy interviews Diana Henriques (her appearance begins at roughly the 15 minute mark):

More details about the Stacking Benjamins podcast here.

RogerEbert.com Review

“This is a subtle, fascinating performance—a chronicle of a man who destroyed lives, including those of his family members, but never quite understood the depths of his own evil. ”

Read the full review here.

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