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BusinessWeek October 4, 2004 Tom Lowry |
A Lion In Winter Ken Auletta's new book "Media Man: Ted Turner's Improbable Empire" is an astute look at a truly innovative executive who has seen more than his share of woes, large and small. |
BusinessWeek November 15, 2004 Peter Coy |
A Geek's Walk on Wall Street In "My Life as a Quant," Emanuel Derman offers a literate and entertaining memoir of his two-stage career in physics and finance engineering -- including a detailed explanation of trading tools he developed. |
BusinessWeek February 16, 2004 Marcia Vickers |
When The Market Went Mad Origins of the Crash: The Great Bubble and Its Undoing by former Wall Street Journal reporter Roger Lowenstein masterfully dissects the late-1990s stock boom and how it came to be. |
BusinessWeek December 8, 2003 |
The Year's Best Business Books The Innovator's Solution: Creating and Sustaining Successful Growth... Wheels for the World: Henry Ford, His Company, and a Century of Progress... The Maverick and His Machine: Thomas Watson, Sr., and the Making of IBM... etc. |
BusinessWeek June 21, 2004 Christopher Farrell |
Heeding The Herd Instinct "The Wisdom of the Crowds" by James Surowiecki discusses why the many are smarter than the few and how collective wisdom shapes business, economies, societies, and nations. |
BusinessWeek October 18, 2004 Diane Brady |
Change Happens. Act Now The new book, "Confronting Reality: Doing What Matters to Get Things Right," by Larry Bossidy and Ram Charan cannily addresses the pressure on managers to train a microscope on their business models. |
BusinessWeek March 22, 2004 Peter Coy |
The Convictions Of A Convert In defending globalization, Bhagwati isn't standing up for the status quo. He's making the case for a humane form of globalization guided by enlightened government policies. It made sense in 1963, and it makes sense in 2004. |
BusinessWeek June 27, 2005 |
The Books of Summer From neoconservatives to Julius Caesar, here's a summer book sampler for vacation. |
Finance & Development June 1, 2000 |
Books By Amartya Sen, Jagdish Bhagwati, and Dana Frank |
BusinessWeek March 1, 2004 Steve Hamm |
Adding Customers To The Design Team The Wal-Martization of U.S. business means that people's business and personal needs are increasingly being met by outfits that provide a tremendous array of commodity-like products and services -- and offer them with Darwinian efficiency. |
BusinessWeek April 26, 2004 Hardy Green |
Clobbered By The Cornucopia A review of Barry Schwartz's book "The Paradox of Choice: Why More Is Less." |
HBS Working Knowledge October 8, 2012 Julia Hanna |
The Immigrants Who Built America's Financial System In The Founders and Finance, Harvard Business School business historian Thomas McCraw lays out in fascinating detail how immigrants Alexander Hamilton and Albert Gallatin became essential to the nation's survival. |