Bestselling author Michael Lewis delivers again with this series of
themed travelogues about the financial crisis and originally
published in Vanity Fair. Each of the articles stands well on its
own, but in series they manage to bring an additional element, a
much broader perspective on the financial crisis and on human
nature.
Lewis travels to the major hot-spots: Iceland, Greece, Ireland,
Germany and the US, noting the similarities and the differences in
each of their situations, but mostly letting the individual
characters who populate his essays tell the stories. Descriptions
of people are rich, humorous, playful and cutting, but never mean
spirited - the kind of descriptions your friends might use at your
roast. Descriptions of countries' national characters and of
specific places are equally pithy; "it's the sort of place bankers
stay because they think it's where the artists stay."
As expected, bank leadership, politicians and regulators fare
poorly in Lewis' crosshairs, and although they play small walk-on
parts, investment banks such as Merrill Lynch come across as
morally bankrupt and duplicitous, far worse than their
aforementioned dimwitted but greedy co-conspirators. Lewis is
finance literature's equivalent of television's Jon Stewart,
calling all out on their motives, their revisionist explanations,
and their mistakes. Ultimately, though, Lewis settles on the root
cause - it's us; it's human nature and short term thinking. One of
his interviewees sums it up best when he says about the virtual
bankruptcy of his city, "I think we've suffered from a series of
mass delusions."
As much as Charles Kindleberger's excellent book Manias, Panics and
Crashes offers a deep retrospective of the evidence of our foibles,
Boomerang offers finely drawn characters who give insight into the
human behaviour that inevitably leads to the crashes. A much
different perspective, much more enjoyable to read, but no less
effective. (Margaret Atwood's "Payback" is an equally excellent and
alternative take).
As a former bond trader himself, Lewis has an easy grasp of the
issues, the interests and the conflicts, and he segues from
character to character and setting to setting to weave his story in
the most entertaining and engaging of ways. These strengths set
Lewis apart from most financial writers who concentrate on a
chronological recounting of facts, with character development
playing second fiddle. In all of the best ways in these short
articles, Lewis is like Charles Dickens with a sketchbook rather
than the vast canvas of a full length novel.
You really should read this book. You will be entertained, you will
learn something, and whatever your political or economic stripe,
you will pause for some self reflection, because in the end the
financial crisis boomerangs back to us and to human nature.