Great book that breaks down the life of the greatest American investor in detail. From his personal to business life, this book covers near 100 years of living a fulfilling life and being a great fudiciary of others assets.
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Very in depth material about Warren Buffett. Since we may very well be coming to an end of an era in the stock market, both the Greenspan book and this book are giving us a history lesson of the market and business world we have experienced. Since times have been very good in the market since 1982, and some would argue even before; there is a huge audience for this book at this time. Those who don't read it and are interested...
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I recently re-read Roger Lowenstein's biography, Buffett: The Making of an American Capitalist (first published in 1995 and now re-issued with a new Afterword), and then read this more recent one by Alice Schroeder. Both are first-rate. Which to select if reading only one? That depends on how much you wish to know about Buffett's personal life, including his relations with various family members, and how curious you are about...
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Like many, I have studied Warren Buffett for countless hours, learning about how his simple ideas served him so well in business. I am only on page 210 of this amazing book and I will tell you that this book will change many lives for the better. Each one of us has a story to tell, though most of us will never find an audience. Life is complicated, and there is much adversity and potential hardship along the way. In the end,...
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The title of this book refers to Buffett's likening life to a snowball - "the important thing is to find wet snow and a really long hill." Buffett certainly has had that effect with money. "The Snowball" begins with a Buffett presentation to an elite 1999 group at Sun Valley, suggesting in a humorous manner that the ".com" frenzy was no more than a bubble. Then, its on to learning why his associate Charles Munger (an inseparable...
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