Money: From Bronze to Bitcoin, the True Story of a Made-up Thing
By (Author) Jacob Goldstein
Atlantic Books
Atlantic Books
19th October 2021
Main
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Management accounting, bookkeeping and auditing
Personal finance
Banking
Budgeting and financial management
332.49
Paperback
272
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 20mm
237g
Humans invented money from nothing, so why can't we live without it And why does no one understand what it really is In this lively tour through the centuries, Jacob Goldstein charts the story of this paradoxical commodity, exploring where money came from, why it matters and whether bitcoin will still exist in twenty years.
Full of interesting stories and quirky facts - from the islanders who used huge stones as a means of exchange to the merits of universal basic income - this is an indispensable handbook for anyone curious about how money came to make the world go round.
Fast-paced and chatty... a history of currency full of astonishing tales you might tell a friend in the pub... Great preparation for turbulent times: a vibrant and accessible grounding in how the evolution of cash - organic, random and social - really works. * The New York Times *
Entertaining... [Goldstein's] strength is historical sweep, from the clay balls recording debts in Mesopotamia 5,000 years ago to decentralised encrypted electronic currencies including bitcoin. * Financial Times *
A roller coaster ride through the history of one of humanity's strangest and most consequential inventions. This is a gripping, mind-bending story, and you couldn't ask for a better storyteller than Jacob Goldstein. * Tim Harford, author of How To Make The World Add Up *
A lucid, entertaining explainer of all things economic.
* Ira Glass, host and producer of This American Life *Jacob Goldstein is the host of the hit international podcast Planet Money - with millions of listeners worldwide. He has written about money for the New York Times Magazine and his stories air regularly on This American Life, All Things Considered and Morning Edition. He previously worked as a reporter at the Wall Street Journal and the Miami Herald.