Finance books: Barbarians at the Gate: amazing story of the botched MBO of RJR Nabisco that pretty sums up Wall Street in its heyday

Den of Thieves: all about the largest insider trading ring in history. Pulls together the junk bond boom, corporate raiders, etc. a great wall street history lesson.

Non-finance books: The Obstacle is the Way: several accounts of people who have endured extreme hardship looked at from a Greek stoicism perspective.

Thinking Fast and Slow: all about how human behavior is influenced by heuristics and biases. This one is probably my favorite and also the most useful book I have read.

 

It's a really long book (900+pages) that I read during my two years in the military. My favorite is "The Prize" by Daniel Yergin. It's an authoritative history of petroleum history from 1850 to 1990. It is only after reading this book that I realized that you cannot ever properly understand modern history without petroleum. It's really book full of unbelievable stories of people, companies, and nations around petroleum. I read books like Cosmos by Carl Sagan and bunch of other books (+20) while in the military but The Prize definitely stands out among all.

 

Below are some of my personal favorites:

Liars Poker. Barbarians at the Gate. King of Capital. How to Win Friends and Influence People. Intelligent Investor. Wealth of Nations. House of Morgan. Titan - (Rockefeller Bio). The Last Tycoons. Den of Thieves. The Everything Store. Lords of Finance: The Bankers who Broke the World. The Man Who Knew: The Life and Times of Alan Greenspan. Digital Gold: The Untold Story of Bitcoin. ANYTHING J.R.R. Tolkien, literally. Scar Tissue. Long Walk to Freedom. War and Peace. The Art of War. Great Expectations. The Alchemist. The Accent of Money.

I think you will find most of these on Audible too - great for the morning commute to work.

'I'm jacked... JACKED TO THE TITS!!'
 

It's going really well. I think I'm more or less over the hump -- I have a good gig at a funded start-up and I'm reasonably confident in my skills and ability to meaningfully contribute. I also really enjoy the actual work, which is a nice change of pace from my PE days.

So yeah, still early innings but pretty happy with how things have turned out so far.

 

Not sure about books, but there are a lot of great Excel tutorials online. They might also test your knowledge of VBA, or at least be pleasantly surprised if you happen to know it, as it's also somewhat widely used.

Quant (ˈkwänt) n: An expert, someone who knows more and more about less and less until they know everything about nothing.
 

Romain Rolland, Jean Christophe. And a lot of other essays. Stefan Zweig, World of Yesterday, and almost all other novellas/short stories.

(Richard Feynman, Surely you're joking Mr. Feynman, read recently, don't like it that much, but fun to read)

Persistency is Key
 

Hey Bayoumonkey, I'm not sure how familiar you are with PE or what exactly you are looking for, but I am just starting to learn more about it. One book I just received a few days ago was Barbarians at the Gate (about the fall of RJR Nabisco). It's one of the most recommended books for people interested in investment banking and PE. Hope this helps!

 

I have about 40-50 books on a list that I want to read. The most recently added and ones that have been bumped to the top: In Pursuit of Wealth: The Moral Case For Finance (Might not be up your alley, written by objectivists, more of a pleasure read) King of Capital: The Remarkable Rise, Fall, and Rise Again of Steve Schwarzman and Blackstone Deals from Hell: M&A Lessons that Rise Above the Ashes

 

Les Miserables. Doesn't need an introduction, but this book details how you can control the outcome of your life. This story is about a convict, who was born into poverty and other miserable circumstances, who turned his life around.

 

I just read Liar's Poker yesterday (in case anyone here hasn't read it yet); it was a great read in my opinion and I definitely recommend it. I just started reading Damn It Feels Good To Be A Banker, it's pretty funny. Next one will probably be The Smartest Guys in the Room about the Enron scandal.

 

Economic Facts and Fallacies -Sowell About Face - Hackworth Reinventing the Bazaar The Disciplined Trader Killing Pablo Kill Bin Laden Surviving Hell - Thorsness Bible - God The Art of War The Ranger Handbook Steal this Book Green Eyes Black Rifles

Only two sources I trust, Glenn Beck and singing woodland creatures.
 

Yor-Revuz Continuous Martingales and Brownian motion Karatzas Shreve Brownian Motion and Stochastic Calculus these are some easy stuff to start working on...

 

For real estate, I'd suggest The Real Estate Game by Poorvu. If you're looking for a more serious, textbook intro, Real Estate by Linneman is worth a look.

 

Its always entertaining to look back on books from the 90's. I loved "The Real Estate Game" but excerpts like these are gold:

"As I implied at the outset of this chapter, the recent resurgence of REITs has at least one salutary subplot. To the extent that the recent (1998) fall in REIT prices chases capital away from the real estate industry, we may void the kinds of overbuilding that have led to crashes in the past. Wall Street may do a better job of rationing capital--through its control of the sale of securitized mortgages and REIT shares-- than the thousands of S&Ls that previously dominated the game. If this turns out to be true, this will be a very good outcome, indeed."

Not with those cushy origination fees and friendly ratings agencies though!

 

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