Bank-holding-company

List price: $34.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $10.72
Collectible price: $10.75
Buy one from zShops for: $23.07

Rich Cowboy Writes Vanity Book
A Crash Course In How To Save A BankGrant does an outstanding job of storytelling and the only sad part is knowing the predictable end. Done in by politics, collapsing asset values, and broken promises, Grant struggled to the bitter end, saving as much of the bank's assets and human capital as possible. If all of the other bank and thrift CEO's had put forth a fraction of the effort that Grant put into saving TAB, much less damage would have been done via the S&L crisis and many more institutions would have made it through.
I have only 1 teeny quibble with the book. I would have appreciated more frequent quotes on the stock price of TAB and some of the other banks mentioned throughout the narrative. At times, without charts or recent quotes, you weren't sure if the price was low double-digits or hanging barely above $1 per share when key events took place. Since the book was written before the stock bubble obsessed late 1990's, I can presume that frequent interspersing of quotes wasn't as important then. But this is small potatos in the scheme of things. This book is outstanding and even if the topic is one you never though you'd have interest in, you will finish the book pretty quickly and have a tough time putting it down.
This book would be of interest to anybody with an interest in banking, the financial markets, or Texas history. Even if those aren't your main areas of interest, if you just want to read an in-depth struggle of one man's battles against a whole array of forces aligned against his business and his battle to save it, this is quite enjoyable reading that gives a big picture to an overlooked segment of the S&L debacle.
The FDIC Exposed!







Used price: $46.00

The authour includes characters in his very personal saga until it reads like "War and Peace." It is clear that he believes in judging a book by it's cover. As if a person's height and weight have some sort of importance to the reader. Those things are only important to the author. There isn't a single claim supported by sound argument in this book. What more could you expect from a man who endorses making loan decisions based on a clients honest/dishonest face. Throughout the book the author never loses this attitude.
The approach is pure "Gone With the Wind." The Yankee carpet baggers ruined everything for Texans!!!! That is a shame, because by sheer coincidence I often agree with him. I do think that the federal government hurt a lot of innocent people in the 1980s with bizzare banking policy, and it was unfair that a few where bailed out by the government for no logical reason, while the many suffered.
If you are from Texas, go ahead and press the disapproval button now. Then stop complaining and go to the polls and vote to take your country out of mine.