Sebastian Mallaby is the author of several books, including The Power Law, More Money Than God, The Man Who Knew, and The World's Banker. A former Financial Times contributing editor and two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist, Mallaby is the Paul A. Volcker Senior Fellow for International Economics at the Council on Foreign Relations.
“An impressive achievement and an important piece of scholarship
that both deserves and rewards the careful reader . . . A brilliant
rendering of key moments in recent economic and financial history
that provides the context needed to appreciate Greenspan’s
extraordinary mixed legacy.” —Peter Fisher, International
Finance
“Highly recommended . . . anyone with an interest in postwar U.S.
economic and political history will enjoy The Man Who Knew.” —Ben
Bernanke
“While Greenspan was (and is) a more capable economist than he gets
credit for these days, he was an even better politician . . . This
view of Greenspan as a political animal is central to Mallaby’s
account. It is also, along with the often amusing depictions of
Greenspan’s personal life, what makes it so much fun to read . . .
[An] excellent biography.” —New York Times Book Review
“Mallaby’s masterful biography—which doubles as an excellent
economic history of the past three decades—tells a story of
Greenspan’s technocratic ascent, from his modest boyhood in New
York City, to a young adulthood colored by his philosophical
attraction to the antigovernment libertarianism of the novelist Ayn
Rand, to his career as a high-flying economic consultant, and
finally to his rise to the pinnacle of power at the Fed.” —Foreign
Affairs
“A rock-star central banker emerges in all his contradictions in
Sebastian Mallaby’s fine biography. . . . Deeply researched and
elegantly written. . . . [An] exceptional new biography.”
—Financial Times
“A tour de force—the most deeply reported work on the dry art of
central banking since William Greider’s “Secrets of the Temple”
(1988). But Greider’s work was flawed because he pushed his
reporting through a meat grinder of questionable economic theories.
Mallaby avoids that pitfall. Much like the man he profiles, Mallaby
shows a solid understanding of competing economic—and
political—theories, without tying himself inextricably to any one.”
—The Washington Post
“The Man Who Knew is a tour de force, the story not just of Alan
Greenspan’s career but equally of America’s economic triumphs and
failures over five decades. This carefully researched and elegantly
written book will be essential reading for those who aspire to make
policy and for anyone who wants to divine what drives the choices
that our leaders make.” —Wall Street Journal
“In a superb new book, the product of more than five years’
research, Sebastian Mallaby helps history make up its mind about
Alan Greenspan, the man hailed in 2000 by Phil Gramm, a former
senator, as ‘the best central banker we have ever had,’ but now
blamed for the financial crisis of 2007-08.” —The Economist
“Exceptional . . . Deeply researched and elegantly written . . . As
a description of the politics and pressures under which modern
independent central banking has to operate, the book is
incomparable.” —Financial Times
“Mallaby pulls back the curtain on the controversial Fed chairman .
. . and takes a fresh look at his record.” —Esquire
“Economics is dubbed the dreary science, but as this comprehensive
and absorbing biography reveals, economists can certainly enjoy
lively and interesting lives. . . . Mallaby strives to fairly
consider Greenspan’s successes and failures in this balanced
account. . . . A portrait of a many-faceted and brilliant man far
more appealing than the stolid technocrat who appeared before
Congress and the public during his long tenure (1987–2006) as
chairmanof the Federal Reserve.” —Booklist
“Thorough, balanced, and well informed . . . A masterful, detailed
portrait of one of the leading economic figures of our time.”
—Publishers Weekly
“The astonishing story of how a solitary young man, who found
solace in numbers, became the world’s most powerful economic
decision-maker, presiding over the revolution in finance that
touches everyone. With judgment and authority, The Man Who
Knew takes us inside the great economic crises of our times—and
provides insight for the crises and turmoil yet to come.” —Daniel
Yergin, author of The New Map and The Quest
“One of the best books I’ve read recently isn’t out until October.
It is a biography of Alan Greenspan titled, The Man Who Knew: The
Life and Times of Alan Greenspan. Mr. Greenspan is a fascinating
subject because for so long he was considered a genius, only to
later be blamed for the financial crisis. Mr. Mallaby does an
exquisite job going beyond these two versions of the Greenspan
narrative and taking the reader inside the complicated mind of a
man who may have had one of the largest ever influences over our
economy.” —The New York Times
“A masterful biography of Alan Greenspan, full of astute insights
and deft judgments about the career of one of the most
consequential, and yet enigmatic, economic statesman of our era, a
book that provides a unique and fascinating window into the major
economic policy debates of the last 50 years.” —Liaquat Ahamed,
Pulitzer-Prize winning author of Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who
Broke the World
"Mallaby has a rare ability to blend the stories of powerful people
with insights into influential institutions and formidable policy
challenges. The Man Who Knew is a superb biography—as well as an
economic history, political profile, and monetary policy primer.
Careful research, fine writing, an intriguing narrative, and a
cautionary tale: This book has it all.” —Robert B. Zoellick, Former
President of the World Bank, US Trade Representative, and US Deputy
Secretary of State
“A fascinating and balanced study of arguably the most important
figure of the post-war global financial scene.” —Mervyn King,
Former Governor of the Bank of England and Chairman of its Monetary
Policy Committee
“Admire him or despise him, Alan Greenspan was the preeminent
financial statesman of the post-war era. But Sebastian Mallaby’s
magisterial biography casts him as something more (and more
intriguing) than that: a masterly and mesmerizing politician.
Whether counseling Richard Nixon on the race-freighted Southern
strategy, scheming with Watergate felon Charles Colson on a plan to
neuter the Federal Reserve’s independence, or waging bureaucratic
war against Henry Kissinger (and winning!), Greenspan was cunning,
stealthy, and ruthless, neck deep in the political intrigues of his
era—less the bloodless monetary technocrat of lore than the J.
Edgar Hoover of economics. In riveting, page-turning fashion, The
Man Who Knew reveals the man in full.” —John Heilemann,
managing editor of Bloomberg Politics, host of With All Due
Respect, author of Game Change and Double Down
“A splendid biography—compelling, readable, provocative, richly
researched, brimming with authorial intelligence. A rich, subtle
portrait of a complex and surprisingly vulnerable human being. The
Man Who Knew is a courageous book, for it reckons with Greenspan’s
shortcomings with unbridled honesty. Its judgments are all the more
devastating because Mallaby is scrupulously fair, as unafraid to
praise as he is to critique. And as he leads us through the
passages of Greenspan’s life, Mallaby takes us on a tour of the
sizzling financial dramas and of the great intellectual debates of
the postwar years, from the inflation agonies of Gerald Ford to the
mortgage bubble of the early 2000s. The Man Who Knew will surely
become the definitive Greenspan biography.” —Roger Lowenstein,
author of America’s Bank: The Epic Struggle to Create the Federal
Reserve, and When Genius Failed.
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