?Bryan Burrough has long been one of this nation's best
storytellers, but he has outdone himself with his tour de force,
"The Big Rich." Set amid the rough and tumble of the Texas oil
fields and stretching to the halls of political power in
Washington, this epic tale reveals the hidden undercurrents of
modern American history that flowed from four families of
unimaginable wealth and recklessness. With an unerring eye for
detail, Burrough dissects their lives and histories, starting with
the patriarchs?struggling, poorly educated men who might have
remained forever unknown if not for their success at pulling black
ooze from the ground. "The Big Rich" lays bare their arrogance and
aspirations, their principles and hypocrisy, their daring and
foolishness, taking readers deep inside a world of affluence that
has remained secret for far too long. It is, quite simply, a
triumph.?
?Kurt Eichenwald, author of "The Informant" and "Conspiracy of
Fools"
?It's hard to imagine a greate
aBryan Burrough has long been one of this nationas best
storytellers, but he has outdone himself with his tour de force,
"The Big Rich," Set amid the rough and tumble of the Texas oil
fields and stretching to the halls of political power in
Washington, this epic tale reveals the hidden undercurrents of
modern American history that flowed from four families of
unimaginable wealth and recklessness. With an unerring eye for
detail, Burrough dissects their lives and histories, starting with
the patriarchsastruggling, poorly educated men who might have
remained forever unknown if not for their success at pulling black
ooze from the ground. "The Big Rich" lays bare their arrogance and
aspirations, their principles and hypocrisy, their daring and
foolishness, taking readers deep inside a world of affluence that
has remained secret for far too long. It is, quite simply, a
triumph.a
aKurt Eichenwald, author of "The Informant" and "Conspiracy of
Fools"
aItas hard to imagine a greater literary marriage than that of the
oil barons of Texas and Bryan Burrough. On the one hand, you have a
collection of gargantuan personalities who in the 1920s struck it
rich and then, in the decades that followed, used their wealth to
transform American business, culture and politics. On the other,
you have an authoraand native Texanawho writes, as he always does,
with enormous insight and panache. "The Big Rich" has all the
hallmarks of a classic American saga.a
aDavid Margolick, author of "Beyond Glory: Joe Louis vs. Max
Schmeling, and a World on the Brink"
a"The Big Rich," a 400 page opus on the oil-powered rise of the
Texas elite, has so many characters and entertaining subplots it
reads like apetroleum-based "Lord of the Rings," This is, of
course, a complimenta] In Burroughas captivating story, done with
the same keen eye on excess as his corporate classic "Barbarians at
the Gate," itas clear these men cast a shadow so wide they
contributed more to our economic, national and political identities
than almost any other titans of industry.a
a "GQ"
aLivelya]impeccably rendereda] Burrough has done estimable new
reporting, showing links between Texas money and national politics
that stretch back far earlier than the days of Lyndon B.
Johnson.a
aMimi Schwartz, "The New York Times Book Review"
aA Lone Star epica] Burrough introduces his protagonists with a
novelistas eye for detail. a] Though this book forms an epitaph for
a bygone era, itas not without relevance today.a
a"Bloomberg"
aIt would be hard to ask for a literally or figuratively rich cast
of characters than those in "The Big Rich"a] Nicely detailed and
suspenseful.a
aHarry Hurt III, "The New York Times Business Section"
aEminently readable.a
a"Texas Monthly"
aWinninga]well researched and briskly told. Burrough has produced
an indispensable guide to the knotty fascination that Texas spurs
in the imagination.a
a "BookForum"
aHere at Capitol Annex, we get a fair number of books to review.
Rarely do we come across one that we can so highly recommenda] "The
Big Rich" is simply a amust read.a
a" The Capitol Annex"
aCapitalism at its most colorful oozes across the pages of this
engrossing study of independent oil mena] This is a portrait of
capitalism as white-knuckle risk taking, yielding fruitful
discoveries for the fathers, but only sterile speculation for the
sonsa astory that resonates with todayas economic upheaval.a
a"Publishers Weekly" (starred review)
aThe most improbable people of all must live in Texas and, in the
good old days, they hunted for oil, found it, sold it, made
fortunes and eventually blew most of it. In "The Big Rich," Bryan
Burrough tells a wonderful tale of the four biggest Texas
millionaires.a
a"St. Louis Post-Dispatch"
aBurrougha]invokes a tale of bitter competition, family feuds,
booms, and bankruptcies that more than lives up to the
legends.a
a"Booklist" (starred review)
aAn entertaining look at the larger-than-life histories of the
incomprehensibly rich and powerful.a
a"Library Journal"
aFull of schadenfreude and speculationaand solid, timely history
too.a
a "Kirkus Reviews"
aFirst-class entertainment.a
aJonathan Yardley, "The Washington Post"
aWhatas not to enjoy about a book full of monstrous egos,
unimaginable sums of money and the punishment of greed and
shortsightedness by the march of events?a]["The Big Rich"] is a
rippinga] read from start to finish. At the end of it those of less
ample fortunes will feel their Schadenfreude richly indulged.a
a"The Economist"
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