
Moneyball
by Michael Lewis
The story of how Oakland A's general manager Billy Beane used statistical analysis to build a competitive baseball team on a fraction of the payroll of richer clubs.
Check Price on Amazon (paid link)American · b. 1960
Michael Lewis is an American financial journalist and author whose Moneyball, The Big Short, and Flash Boys transformed public understanding of finance, baseball, and Wall Street culture.
Michael Lewis is the most consistently readable narrative non-fiction writer working in American financial and business journalism. A Princeton and London School of Economics graduate who worked at Salomon Brothers before quitting to write Liar’s Poker (1989) — a memoir of his time on the trading floor that became an accidental classic of Wall Street writing — Lewis has spent three decades turning the abstruse machinery of finance, sport, and politics into page-turning narrative. His gift for finding a human story at the centre of a systemic phenomenon is exceptional.
Moneyball (2003) is, on its surface, about the Oakland Athletics and the use of statistical analysis in baseball personnel decisions. It is actually about the conflict between expert intuition and systematic evidence, and about what happens when an outsider challenges a closed professional culture’s assumptions. The Big Short (2010) uses a handful of investors who correctly predicted the 2008 financial crisis to explain the mortgage-backed securities market and its catastrophic failure — a feat of explanatory journalism that made something genuinely complex accessible without simplifying it into dishonesty. Flash Boys (2014) investigates high-frequency trading and the question of whether the stock market is rigged, with characteristic pace and outrage.
Lewis’s books have their critics. Some economists and finance professionals argue that his narratives oversimplify, that his villains are too clearly villains and his heroes too clearly heroes, and that his populist framing sometimes sacrifices accuracy for drama. These are fair charges, particularly against Liar’s Poker and Flash Boys. But the best of Lewis — Moneyball and The Big Short especially — represent narrative non-fiction at its highest level: books that change how you see a domain and are a genuine pleasure to read.

by Michael Lewis
The story of how Oakland A's general manager Billy Beane used statistical analysis to build a competitive baseball team on a fraction of the payroll of richer clubs.
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by Michael Lewis
The story of the small group of outsiders who bet against the American mortgage market and won as the 2008 financial crisis unfolded.
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by Michael Lewis
The story of Michael Oher — a homeless Black teenager taken in by a wealthy white family in Memphis who goes on to become an NFL first-round pick — intertwined with an economic history of how American football came to value the left tackle, the position that protects a quarterback's blind side, above almost any other.
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by Michael Lewis
Michael Lewis's memoir of his years as a bond salesman at Salomon Brothers in the 1980s, capturing the greed and absurdity of Wall Street's most explosive decade.
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by Michael Lewis
An investigation into high-frequency trading and how a small group of Wall Street outsiders fought to expose a rigged stock market.
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by Michael Lewis
The story of Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, the Israeli psychologists whose collaboration upended our understanding of human judgment and decision-making.
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by Michael Lewis
An investigation into the U.S. federal government's most consequential departments and what happens when the incoming administration fails to prepare for managing them.
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by Michael Lewis
Lewis spent a year embedded with Sam Bankman-Fried and FTX before the cryptocurrency exchange's catastrophic collapse. The result is a portrait of the man at the centre of one of the largest financial frauds in history — a portrait that refuses easy categorisation of SBF as either visionary or villain.
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Michael Lewis's complete bibliography in order — from Liar's Poker and Moneyball to The Big Short and The Undoing Project. Best starting points for new readers.
guide
Where to start with Michael Lewis — whether to begin with The Big Short, Moneyball, or Liar's Poker. A complete reading guide to the master of narrative non-fiction.
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