Crashing the Crash: Business Writers Lay Ground on Lehman
Nocera-McLean jump in first, Daniel Gross in for a fast one

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Pub Crawl
Is it time yet to start pulling together books about last week’s catastrophe on Wall Street? Publishers are uneasy about making plans too soon, but the city’s finest financial journalists—and their literary agents—are eager to get moving.
“There are probably two dozen writers in search of a book, but if you don’t have an idea, you have to wait and watch and see how it unfolds,” said Tim Duggan, VP and executive editor at Harper who specializes in nonfiction. “Maybe there will be a story there in a couple months’ time, when the picture is clearer, but right now the financial climate has been changing dramatically every 24 hours, if not more, so what it will look like in three months’ time could be very, very different.”
Still, getting someone like Wall Street Journal veteran Roger Lowenstein or star New York Times business reporter Andrew Ross Sorkin—both of whom are considering writing books about the crisis—right now means a chance at being first out the door. Moreover, getting them now means no one else will be able to get them later.
“There’s a lot to be said for a timely book, but we don’t know what the book is yet,” said Simon & Schuster publisher David Rosenthal, noting that there are nevertheless writers out there whom he would agree to publish immediately just because he knows they’d do a good job with whatever ends up happening.
At any rate, proposals have started making the rounds.
One comes from Times business columnist Joe Nocera and former Fortune reporter Bethany McLean, who decided to write a book together the day Lehman Brothers declared bankruptcy and Merrill Lynch sold itself to Bank of America. Mr. Nocera was visiting Ms. McLean (co-writer of the Enron book The Smartest Guys in the Room) in Chicago at the time—he was there to attend a science conference, what kind he wouldn’t say—and over some white wine, the two of them decided that a definitive chronicle of the stunning financial crisis was in order, and that they were the team best equipped to produce it.
“We want to write the big book, and I’m not afraid of saying that,” Mr. Nocera said. “It will be a book for the ages and—I know this is going to sound egomaniacal, but—between our contacts and our reporting skills and our writing skills, I think we’ll be pretty tough to beat.”
The agency representing the Nocera-McLean book to publishers, Darhansoff, Verrill and Feldman is said to be asking more than $1 million (No one there picked up the phone when Pub Crawl sought comment).
Sloan Harris, co-director of ICM’s literary department, is preparing to circulate a proposal for a quickie electronic book by Newsweek’s Daniel Gross that would be published before the end of the year (with a possible print edition to follow).
“My idea was to try to get a book out immediately—not immediately for immediately’s sake, but rather to fill the void between daily and weekly journalism and the big door-stopper books that will be published a year or two from now,” Mr. Harris said. He ventured further that readers have nowhere to turn for a thorough explanation of what is happening to the economy and how it got that way.
“I don’t think readers can get a unified view by reading 30 articles,” Mr. Harris said. “And because this is unbelievably immediate, the story changes every day, and it sticks its fingers right down into those things that we care most about. I assume there’s a real hunger for a comprehensive understanding of it, which is not well sated by having to wait six months for a book.” Next Page >




















bethany mclean works for vanity fair
These are not easy books to write and the best ones have to do more than tell what went on in the boardrooms during a crisis. You actually have to go out and find real people with real stories that led to this mess. Start at Main Street then work your way to Wall Street instead of the other way around. There will be a glut of these books and the ones that will work will be the ones that aren't written for sources but rather the rest of us.
Of course, there are larger than life personalities here that will make for great reading, the bridge playing weed smoking crank at Bear Sterns etc., but if you really want the book to reverberate, get away from the trees and look at the forest.
Missed one: BEAR TRAP, which came out last week and I got on Amazon (Brick Tower Press) - it's about Bear Sterns and, to reflect on the comment above, I found it nicely written "for the rest of us."
"He ventured further that readers have nowhere to turn for a thorough explanation of what is happening to the economy and how it got that way."
Yes, they do. Try reading my book, Financial Armageddon. It was published in March 2007 and it correctly anticipated most of what has happened since then.
Here is a sampling of the advance praise for the hardcover edition:
"A breathtaking and coherent vision of financial disaster."
-Edward Chancellor, author, Devil Take the Hindmost: A History of Financial Speculation
"The end of the credit bubble, derivatives excesses, unfulfilled government promises, and the upcoming retirement squeeze will provide investors with their greatest challenge since the 1930s. Financial Armageddon lays out the blueprint for what will happen and how to best prepare yourself and protect your loved ones."
-David Tice, President and Fund Manager, Prudent Bear Funds
Let us not forget Frank Partnoy's book, Infectious Greed, published five years ago. It explains the origins of this mess already--and predicts it. Boo hoo to the bankers who belong to the International Derivatives and Swaps Association who lobbied against regulation of derivatives in the wake of the LongTerm Capital Management fiasco--a wake up call (ignored) if ever there was one.
I'd also put my money on Gillian Tett of the Financial Times, whose reporting for the last 18 months has been stunning. Her sources are global, and her understanding extraordinary.
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