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Ratings: ★★★★★(4.7/5)
Genre: Non-Fiction, Economics, Finance, Business, History, True Crime
Book Review:
Michael Lewis's ''The Big Short'' is that rare book that manages to be profoundly educational, outrageously entertaining, and morally urgent—all at once. With the pacing of a thriller, Lewis tells the incredible true story of the misfits and geniuses who saw the 2008 financial meltdown coming and dared to bet against the entire American economy. His genius lies in making impossibly complex financial concepts—subprime mortgages, collateralized debt obligations (CDOs), and credit default swaps—not just understandable, but utterly fascinating. Through vivid character portraits, he humanizes the arcane world of high finance, exposing a system riddled with willful blindness, perverse incentives, and outright fraud. More than just a post-mortem of a crisis, ''The Big Short'' is a cautionary tale about the fragility of our financial institutions and the high cost of collective delusion. It is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the modern world, and it remains as relevant and shocking today as when it was first published. A masterpiece of explanatory journalism.