
1929
by Andrew Ross Sorkin · 2025
Andrew Ross Sorkin's take on history, the honest verdict is below.
Worth reading? Sorkin's narrative history of the great crash and its lead-up. Likely a gripping, character-driven account if it matches his prior work; treat this as a cautious take, since it's a 2025 release I can't verify in detail. Skip if you want technical economics over story.
| Author | Andrew Ross Sorkin |
|---|---|
| Published | 2025 |
| Category | History |
The Verdict
Sorkin’s narrative history of the great crash and its lead-up. Likely a gripping, character-driven account if it matches his prior work; treat this as a cautious take, since it’s a 2025 release I can’t verify in detail. Skip if you want technical economics over story.
anyone weighing whether 1929 belongs on their history shelf
you want a different angle than Andrew Ross Sorkin's

Top 7 Lessons from 1929
- Financial manias build on collective belief that ignores warning signs.
- Leverage amplifies both the boom and the collapse.
- The people running the system are fallible and often overconfident.
- Panic spreads faster than any orderly response can contain it.
- Crashes have long human and political aftershocks.
- Regulation tends to lag the innovations that cause crises.
- History rhymes; the 1929 dynamics recur in new forms.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is 1929 worth reading?
Likely yes if you enjoy narrative financial history, given the author's track record. This is a cautious assessment of a recent release.
What is the main idea of 1929?
It chronicles how speculation, leverage, and human hubris drove the 1929 crash and its fallout.
Who should read 1929?
Readers of financial history and anyone interested in how market manias and collapses unfold.
Ready to read it?
Get 1929 on Amazon






