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Depicting the effort to create a central bank, Fortune contributor Lowenstein tells a gripping tale with a trove of vivid characters and period details; you can almost see the handlebar mustaches and smell the oyster stuffing. And the broader cultural conflicts he describes -distrust of centralized authority, tension between Main Street and Wall Street are just as relevant now as they were in the era of Taft, Teddy, and Woodrow Wilson. Fortune Magazine
Important and intriguing .Lowenstein skillfully shows the connections between past and current events . Readers seeking a comprehensive history of the Federal Reserve from its conception to modern times will find this work especially appealing. Library Journal
Lowenstein vividly recounts the key moments in this hard-fought battle, from the Panic of 1907 to the 1912 presidential campaign to Wilson s impassioned declaration to a joint session of Congress. Captivating and enlightening, this book brings a pivotal time in American history to life. -Publishers Weekly
His well-researched account for general readers takes us from Aldrich's secret meeting with leading Wall Street figures on Jekyll Island, off the Georgia coast, to plot banking reforms, to Woodrow Wilson's Princeton bedchamber, where the ill president persuaded Virginia Congressman Carter Glass of a key compromise to ensure creation of a national bank. Lowenstein doubts the Federal Reserve Act could be passed in today's volatile political climate, but he provides an unusually lucid history of our nation's central bank. - Kirkus Reviews
America s Bank, Roger Lowenstein s lively account of the creation of the Federal Reserve in 1913, resonates today as we debate the conduct of monetary policy and financial regulation. Washington against the bankers, central authority against dispersed decision-making, rules against discretion, independence against accountability it was all there, a century ago, resolved by political ingenuity into compromises that have stood the test of time. - Paul Volcker, former chairman of the Federal Reserve
"The Federal Reserve feels as permanent a part of American life as, say, Mount Vernon or Monticello, but as Roger Lowenstein argues in this engaging and illuminating book, the central bank is, historically speaking, a relatively recent arrival. With grace and insight, Lowenstein takes us inside the creation of the Fed, a story of twists, turns--and lessons for our own time."- Jon Meacham, author of Thomas Jefferson and American Lion
A highly engaging historical account of the personalities and politics behind the creation of the Federal Reserve. - Ben Bernanke, former chairman of the Federal Reserve
Set in the waning years of the Gilded Age, America's Bank tells the fascinating story of how an unlikely and often fractured coalition of Wall Street bankers and progressives, Southern Democrats and establishment Republicans came together to tame a chronically unstable financial system and create the Federal Reserve. Incisive and brilliantly researched, this is an important and original book about one of the most consequential pieces of legislation in our history with lessons aplenty for today.
- Liaquat Ahamed, author of Lords of Finance
The birth of the Federal Reserve is a fascinating and almost unknown story, with lessons even for today. In the hands of a master storyteller like Roger Lowenstein, it is also a page-turner."
- Alan S. Blinder, American economist and the author of After the Music Stopped: The Financial Crisis, the Response, and the Work Ahead
Roger Lowenstein has accomplished a small miracle in America s Bank: The Epic Struggle to Create the Federal Reserve. A masterful story-teller, Lowenstein has made sense of the Federal Reserve System for those of us who never quite understood how it worked or where it came from, and done so in a taut page-turner that is hard to put down. (I read it in two sittings.) His book provides new insights into progressive-era reform; explains why, then and now, credit is more important to the economy than cash; and reintroduces us to three presidents and the remarkable group of bankers, businessmen, and congressmen who left their mark on one of the twentieth century s most important pieces of legislation, the Federal Reserve Act of 1913. - David Nasaw, author of The Patriarch and Andrew Carnegie"
"As Roger Lowenstein tells it in 'America's Bank, ' an illuminating history of the Fed's unlikely origin story, the central bank represented an ambitious -- and not entirely successful -- effort to resolve several long-standing tensions that lay at the heart of the American experiment in self-government: East Coast vs. the interior, urban sensibilities vs. rural ones, mercantile vs. agrarian interests, Wall Street vs. Main Street. It is still working out the kinks."--Washington Post
"The fun of the book -- and its enduring value -- lies in the rich details about the cranks, pawns and prophets who jousted with one another in the days of Teddy Roosevelt, William Taft and Woodrow Wilson." - Forbes
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