Recent Blog Posts
-
The Times' Rorshach Geithner Story
Apr 27 20099:26 am EDT -
Sinking Animal Spirits
Apr 27 20098:45 am EDT -
Counter-cyclical Urban Policy
Apr 26 200910:00 am EDT -
Be Your Own Counterfeiter
Apr 26 20099:36 am EDT -
Being Tim Geithner
Apr 25 200912:37 pm EDT -
Notes From a Press Conference Naif
Apr 25 20099:41 am EDT -
What Good is the News?
Apr 25 20098:32 am EDT -
Stressful Enough
Apr 24 20092:29 pm EDT -
Not Regretting the Pound
Apr 24 20091:09 pm EDT -
Introducing the New Ford Squeeze
Apr 24 20099:47 am EDT
Links
- Felix Salmon

- DealBreaker

- Ryan Avent: The Bellows

- The Epicurean Dealmaker

- Chris Anderson

- Ultimi Barbarorum

- MarketBeat

- Michelle Leder

- John Quiggin

- The Panelist

- Andrew Leonard

- Streetsblog

- Brad Setser

- Michael Mandel

- Financial Crookery

- Kash Mansori

- Dean Baker

- Calculated Risk

- Free Exchange

- Curbed

- Lance Knobel

- Econospeak

- Carbon Tax Center

- Overcoming Bias

- Mark Thoma

- Naked Capitalism

- Alphaville

- Barry Ritholtz

- Alexander Campbell

- The Bayesian Heresy

- Brad DeLong

- DealBook

- Greg Mankiw

- Deal Journal

- FP Passport

- Carl Bialik

- Marginal Revolution

- A Fistful of Euros

- Dan Gross

Crisis: The Book
Leon Neyfakh reports that Joe Nocera and Bethany McLean are putting together a proposal for what Nocera calls "a book for the ages" on the financial crisis. And they're not the only journalists writing a book on this subject: Neyfakh mentions Andrew Ross Sorkin, Roger Lowenstein, Kate Kelly, Charlie Gasparino, Gillian Tett, Michael Lewis, Daniel Gross, and David Wessel as others in various stages between pitching and finishing books. I'd add Portfolio's own Duff McDonald to the list, too.
But the really big book, the one which everyone's going to want, is Paulson's.
Paulson will be unemployed come January, and has been right in the middle of every major event of the credit crisis. Obviously he doesn't need the money, although his advance would surely be stratospheric. But he does have the ego; my feeling is that he'll do the same thing as his predecessor Bob Rubin, find a very high-rent co-writer to share the drudge work, and put out his side of the story. And I'll be very interested to read it.
Meanwhile, that list of journalists comprises something of an all-star financial-journalism roster: the industry would suffer if they all went on book leave at once. And I can only imagine what Graydon Carter thinks of McLean disappearing off to write a book just two months after she started work at Vanity Fair. What's more, if Sorkin does disappear to write a book, I somehow doubt that he would return to the NY Times afterwards. We've already seen the financial crisis rejigger the architecture of Wall Street; it might end up doing something similar for financial journalism, too.
Comments
If you are commenting using a Facebook account, your profile information may be displayed with your comment depending on your privacy settings. By leaving the 'Post to Facebook' box selected, your comment will be published to your Facebook profile in addition to the space below.





