Dark Genius of Wall Street Audiobook By Edward Renehan cover art

Dark Genius of Wall Street

The Misunderstood Life of Jay Gould, King of the Robber Barons

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Dark Genius of Wall Street

By: Edward Renehan
Narrated by: George K. Wilson
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Author of The Kennedys at War and The Lion’s Pride, Edward J. Renehan, Jr. presents a fascinating biography of one of the most hated and most admired American entrepreneurs of all time. Here, he sheds light on Wall Street magnate Jay Gould and his frequently overshadowed creativity. Gould was the quintessential robber baron and the original modern businessman whose financial examples persist even today.

©2005 Edward J. Renehan, Jr. (P)2006 Recorded Books, LLC
Professionals & Academics Biographies & Memoirs Historical Business
Well-researched Biography • Balanced Perspective • Good Narration • Fresh Objective Look • Fascinating Financial History

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I held off buying this book for a long time because some reviews complained about audio issues, but I didn't notice any. The book is very good and well-narrated.

Great book, audio is fine

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Jay Gould was a complex man. No "good time Charlie," not a man to clamor for attention (as was his contemporary and sometime crony Jim Fisk, colorfully described here), Gould had a quieter but doubtless striking focus and intensity. Plenty of light is shed here on the individuals along the way to Gould's apex of wealth, financial dealing and power, and this moves nicely as a human story. I do hear the author being an apologist for Gould, not distractingly so, but it seems to me the desire to rehabilitate the man's reputation sometimes clashes with the story we are being told. Gould is presented as a smart and motivated fellow in a fairly sympathetic light, passing through difficulties not uncommon to his era, but rather suddenly we find him tangling bitterly with a few business partners who come to despise him (rightly or wrongly), and boom! Here he is in New York City and in the middle of every kind of duplicity in the Erie Railroad wars with Fisk, Vanderbilt and others, a viper pit (or perhaps a every exciting gladiatorial arena, depending on one's views) if there ever was one! Only the most clever, swift and tough could survive in that situation, and I wonder where THAT Gould came from, fairly suddenly. But I enjoy this story, and I like the deal details and pace.

For 19th century business and finance history fans

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Enjoyed learning about Gould’s life. Had not heard the whole story. Book was well researched and detailed.

Very detailed. Informative.

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Please fix the skipping audio. this is a great story of what to do and not do in business.

Great story, great narrator but recording skips

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This is an interesting revisionist biography of one of the least-liked businessmen in American history. It not only uncovers new sources that older bios don't use, it charts the growth and shaping of Jay Gould's reputation as a conscienceless financial pirate. Gould's enduring bad reputation was shaped not just by his actions, but by his enemies, the press, and by Gould himself, each for their own ends. This case study in the shaping of public perception of famous people is worth the cost of the book alone. The narration of the book is good, but the narrator takes odd, irregular pauses in places that breaks up the flow of the narrative. This isn't a dealbreaker by any means, but is a bit annoying.

Interesting Bio of a Controversial Man

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