From Rags to Riches, the Sassoons Conquer Global Trade

The Sassoons were to global trade what the Rothschilds were to global finance. This marvelous narrative sprouts from untapped family archives. In the 1800s, the Sassoons managed to connect London and Bombay, Calcutta and Shanghai in improbable ways. amazon.com affiliate…

Motion Pictures Once Seemed Fantastical

Thomas Edison may own the narrative about creating the first motion picture. The actual title, however, probably goes to the Frenchman Louis Le Prince. One reason why most have never heard of him is that Le Prince disappeared in 1890…

The Dysfunctional Family Gets a Fresh Look

More novels are destined to sprout from Central Florida; it is a part of the state where baby boomers have created a cabinet of curiosities. In this work, the author writes about a woman who inherits her father’s taxidermy business…

Roots of Fear Can Be Found Among Politicians

Khaled Beydoun amplifies his work on Islamophobia in America and now takes a global perspective. A basic premise here is that the US war on terror fertilizes religious tension worldwide. The material nimbly spans Asia, Europe, and the Middle East.…

How to Fix Your Attention

Nir Eyal had had his first publishing success with Hooked, a go-to book for addictive tech design. His follow-up takes us in the opposite direction, offering a type of self-help guide on avoiding workday distractions. The author is informed by…

Energy Geopolitics Now Has a Primer

On the surface, The New Map would seem to be more about fossils fuels than emerging markets. Think again. The pursuit of oil wealth or the cost of energy resources are common threads across the developing world. Following in the…

Investors Should Think of “Why” Before “How”

Behavioral economics is vogue amid wealth advisors and financial planners. The challenge is applying that knowledge to the investment discipline through the field of behavioral finance. While this book is largely targeted at the sophisticated, individual investor, it is also…

Placeholder My Friends

This book fills an outsized gap in accepted financial-market theory. The MIT-based author makes the case that markets evolve, like biology, discounting the physics-envy that permeates most modern-day investment theory. His approach is particularly useful in trying to understand the…

Placeholder Adaptive Markets

This book fills an outsized gap in accepted financial-market theory. The MIT-based author makes the case that markets evolve, like biology, discounting the physics-envy that permeates most modern-day investment theory. His approach is particularly useful in trying to understand the…