10 Great Novels About Money (and Crypto)

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10 Great Novels About Money (and Crypto)

If you’re reading this, chances are very good you’re part of an immensely privileged slice of humanity with access to what’s known as “leisure time


If you’re reading this, chances are very good you’re part of an immensely privileged slice of humanity with access to what’s known as “leisure time.” Chances are also pretty good that you’re the type of psycho who wants to spend it as productively as possible. High up on my personal list of “Type A Maniac Life Hacks” is indulging in a great and entertaining book that also happens to teach me something.

So here, with the holidays upon us, is a “To-Do List of Educational Pleasure” for anyone who’s curious about money and finance in all their surreal complexity. Some of these books are big L Literature, and others are finely crafted entertainments. Several of them are both. And they’re all about that mystical institution, the thing everyone needs: lucre, beans, cheddar, lettuce, money.

This isn’t meant to be a definitive list – just 10 fantastic books in no particular order. There’s no time like the present.

This article is part of Culture Week, which explores how crypto is changing media and entertainment. It also published in The Node newsletter, which you can subscribe to here.

“Bartleby the Scrivener: A Story of Wall Street” – Herman Melville (1850)

Sometimes described as the first existentialist novel (really a novelette), this manifesto of refusal is appropriately set in New York’s financial district circa 1850. Bartleby, for a time a hardworking clerk in a Wall Street law firm, suddenly begins to refuse all work, and indeed all activity, for no discernible reason. Despite the genuine concern of his employer, and against all apparent logic, Bartleby sticks to this principle until he dies of starvation in a debtor’s prison.

Bartleby’s vexatious behavior is never explained, making him a semi-mystical avatar for refuseniks everywhere. More specifically, some think “Scrivener” reflects Herman Melville’s deep rage at finance and the market. Now recognized as one of the greatest American novelists, the “Moby Dick” author found little success in his lifetime. He stopped writing fiction soon after “Bartleby.” His final novel, “The Confidence Man,” was also focused on finance.

“Bright Orange for the Shroud” – John D. McDonald (1965)

(Fawcett Publications)

John D. McDonald is considered perhaps the greatest thriller writer of the 20th century. He penned the source material for Robert Mitchum and Robert DeNiro’s respective terrifying versions of “Cape Fear,” and no less a titan than Kurt Vonnegut described his work as “a treasure on the order of the tomb of Tutankhamen.” In this novel, hardboiled hero Travis McGee is trying to recover a friend’s money lost in a land development scam. It’s a sterling slice of cynical brutality, replete with backwoods hillbillies, crooked lawyers, savage beatings, suicides and just desserts. McDonald explored financial scams again a half-century later in “Condominium” (2014), about Florida real estate.

“The Bonfire of the Vanities” – Tom Wolfe (1987) and “The Way We Live Now” – Anthony Trollope (1875)

Written and published nearly a century apart, these two novels are a matched set satirizing the excesses of wealth – and, particularly, of wealth gained through speculation. Anthony Trollope’s work, inspired by London’s Panic of 1873, centers on a financier running a railroad stock pump-and-dump that’s so successful he makes it into Parliament before things fall apart. “There seems to be reason for fearing that men and women will be taught to feel that dishonesty, if it can become splendid, will cease to be abominable,” Trollope said of his motivation for the prescient work.

Prescient because, of course, the same thing was still happening a century later. Tom Wolfe’s “Bonfire” chronicles the rise and fall of a bond trader named Sherman McCoy. McCoy’s extravagant lifestyle makes him seem like the resident of a different universe until a single wrong turn puts him at the center of a web of intrigue, and ultimately brings him down. It is widely considered the seminal novel of the 1980s because it shows Wall Street graft, not in the form of a simple con, but as an entire legalized racket enmeshed in racism and class privilege.

“Cotton Comes to Harlem” – Chester Himes (1965)

This hard-boiled detective classic starts with a classic web of swindles: the hijacking of a community fund that may have been a scam to begin with. Published in 1965, “Cotton” featured two of the first Black detectives in popular fiction in the personages of “Grave Digger” Jones and “Coffin” Ed Johnson. But as you might guess, these aren’t the smooth investigators of Homicide or The Wire: Grave Digger and Coffin Ed pummel the bejeezus out of pretty much everyone who looks at them sideways. Its focus on grit and action is probably why this (also frequently hilarious) little book was turned into one of the first “blaxploitation” films in 1970, directed by Ossie Davis and co-starring Redd Foxx.

“High Rise” – J.G….



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