I read a hundred or so books this year in my quest to better understand our complicated and turbulent world
I is James Stavridis a Bloomberg Opinion columnist, a retired US Navy admiral, former supreme allied commander of NATO, and vice chairman of global affairs at the Carlyle Group. Three stood out. The first is 1929: Inside the Greatest Crash in Wall Street History and How it Shattered a Nation by New York Times business columnist and Squawk Box host Andrew Ross Sorkin. Much as in his previous book — Too Big To Fail, a gripping description of the global recession of 2008-2009 — it is a character-driven, front-row seat to an epic economic and geopolitical crisis, and a warning of what might be ahead. In the roaring 1920s, people could easily buy stocks on margin and “the market only went up.” The streets of New York were full of newly minted millionaires flaunting their wealth. The nation had shaken off the effects of a global pandemic and was full of “animal spirits” and financial exuberance. A stock market at record highs? Post-pandemic animal spirits? Inclination to tariffs a...