Fred Schwed, Jr., was a professional trader who had the good sense to get out after losing a bundle (of mostly his own money) in the 1929 crash. Some years later, Schwed published a children's book titled Wacky, the Small Boy. Wacky became a bestseller, and Schwed went on to draw further on his experience in writing Where Are the Customers' Yachts? His publisher said of him, "Mr. Schwed has attended Lawrenceville and Princeton and has spent the last ten years on Wall Street. As a result, he knows everything there is to know about children."
"Once I picked it up I did not put it down until I finished ...What Schwed has done is capture fully-in deceptively clean language-the lunacy at the heart of the investment business."-From the Foreword by Michael Lewis, Bestselling author of Liar's Poker This hilarious portrait of everyday Wall Street and its denizens rings as true today as it did when it was first published in 1940. Writing with a rare mixture of wry cynicism and bonhomie reminiscent of Mark Twain and H. L. Mencken, Fred Schwed, Jr., skewers everyone including himself in his brilliant send-ups of bankers, brokers, traders, investors, analysts, and hapless customers. "How great to have a reissue of a hilarious classic that proves the more things change the more they stay the same. Only the names have been changed to protect the innocent." -Michael Bloomberg President, Bloomberg, LP "...one of the funniest books ever written about Wall Street."-Jane Bryant Quinn, The Washington Post "It's amazing how well Schwed's book is holding up after 55 years. About the only thing that's changed on Wall Street is that computers have replaced pencils and graph paper. Otherwise, the basics are the same. The investor's need to believe somebody is matched by the financial advisor's need to make a nice living. If one of them has to be disappointed, it's bound to be the former."-John Rothchild, Author, A Fool and His Money Financial Columnist, Time magazine "A delightful classic and reminder of excesses past and how little things change." -Bob Farrell, Senior Vice President, Merrill Lynch
翻译得不好~读起来没什么感觉 读起来如同嚼蜡 丝毫没有一种读到好书时候的喜悦和激动 这本书和 彼得林奇的成功投资不能比 虽然封面看起来是同一系列的书 还有校对没有审出来的错误 或者是翻译错误~ 总之~ 我觉得翻译们的水平实在是~~~ 虽然据说这三位翻译都有金融...
評分今天无意之中翻了翻长投app,里面解读《用户的游艇在哪里》。之前看了一遍,但完全只是看了一遍,没读明白,也不知道为啥它会变成如此经久不衰的书。听了解读才明白,它值得被推广至今。 书里面讲了追涨杀跌以及投机心态,即便最初赚到了钱,也会导致最终输得倾家荡产,血本无...
評分 評分今天无意之中翻了翻长投app,里面解读《用户的游艇在哪里》。之前看了一遍,但完全只是看了一遍,没读明白,也不知道为啥它会变成如此经久不衰的书。听了解读才明白,它值得被推广至今。 书里面讲了追涨杀跌以及投机心态,即便最初赚到了钱,也会导致最终输得倾家荡产,血本无...
評分《客户的游艇在哪里》(Where Are the Customers' Yachts: or A Good Hard Look at Wall Street,作者施韦德)是一门有趣的前前前(前到1929年前后)华尔街交易员的关于华尔街的小册子,号称其文笔幽默(或者说尖刻)堪比马克吐温,书名来自于一个华尔街的小段子,这个段子说...
總是有相當數量的可憐人,忙於從上韆次的賭輪盤的輪子上查找可能的重復模式。十分不幸的是,他們通常會找到。
评分總是有相當數量的可憐人,忙於從上韆次的賭輪盤的輪子上查找可能的重復模式。十分不幸的是,他們通常會找到。
评分總是有相當數量的可憐人,忙於從上韆次的賭輪盤的輪子上查找可能的重復模式。十分不幸的是,他們通常會找到。
评分總是有相當數量的可憐人,忙於從上韆次的賭輪盤的輪子上查找可能的重復模式。十分不幸的是,他們通常會找到。
评分總是有相當數量的可憐人,忙於從上韆次的賭輪盤的輪子上查找可能的重復模式。十分不幸的是,他們通常會找到。
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