William Green has written for many publications in the US and Europe, including Time, Fortune, Forbes, Fast Company, The New Yorker, The Spectator (London), and The Economist. He edited the Asian edition of Time while living in Hong Kong, then moved to London to edit the European, Middle Eastern, and African editions of Time. As an editor and coauthor, he has collaborated on several books, including Guy Spier’s much-praised memoir, The Education of a Value Investor. Born and raised in London, Green studied English literature at Oxford University and received a master’s degree in journalism at Columbia University. He lives in New York with his wife and their two children.
From a renowned financial journalist who has written for Time, Fortune, Forbes, and The New Yorker, a fresh and unexpectedly profound book that draws on hundreds of hours of exclusive interviews with many of the world’s super-investors to demonstrate that the keys for building wealth hold other life lessons as well.
Billionaire investors. If we think of them, it’s with a mixture of awe and suspicion. Clearly, they possess a kind of genius—the proverbial Midas Touch. But are the skills they possess transferable? And do they have anything to teach us besides making money?
In Richer, Wiser, Happier, William Green draws on interviews that he’s conducted over twenty-five years with many of the world’s greatest investors. As he discovered, their talents extend well beyond the financial realm. The most successful investors are mavericks and iconoclasts who question conventional wisdom and profit vastly from their ability to think more rationally, rigorously, and objectively. They are master game players who consciously maximize their odds of long-term success in markets and life, while also minimizing any risk of catastrophe. They draw powerful insights from many different fields, are remarkably intuitive about trends, practice fanatical discipline, and have developed a high tolerance for pain. As Green explains, the best investors can teach us not only how to become rich, but how to improve the way we think, reach decisions, assess risk, avoid costly errors, build resilience, and turn uncertainty to our advantage.
Green ushers us into the lives of more than forty super-investors, visiting them in their offices, homes, and even their places of worship—all to share what they have to teach us. Richer, Wiser, Happier brings together the thinking of many of the greatest investment minds, from Sir John Templeton to Charlie Munger, Jack Bogle to Ed Thorp, Will Danoff to Mohnish Pabrai, Bill Miller to Laura Geritz, Joel Greenblatt to Howard Marks. In explaining how they think and why they win, this landmark book provides gems of insight that will enrich you not only financially but also professionally and personally.
##这本书可能是我最近几年看过的最好的一本关于投资的书。书总共八章加上一章后记。前面六章写得都很好,最后两张和后记就崩坏了,有凑字数的感觉。首先是选的人都是些不重要的人,我没有兴趣去了解他们的backstory,who cares?但是居然有些时候数十页都在介绍一个看上去不重要的人,作者的写作功力在这里见底了。另外就是最后几章提炼的内容都很肤浅,作者的阅历不足以对一些事情进行概括,这也是这本书的局限性 -- 作者自己不干投资,有些话题他并不能完全理解。
评分 评分 评分##星级: ★★★★ 这本书小圈子里很多人推荐,因此特意来读,的确是值得一读的好书。 印象比较深刻的一些点: 1. 成功的投资者都是长期主义者; 2. 每个投资人都会遇到自己的低迷期; 3. Money 是精神自由的基础,但 Money 不是人生的目的; 4. 成功的投资者最后都去做慈善,追寻自己的人生价值;
评分##好书,力荐。书评: https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/akPWWUFTzVsF5tPkihs_uA
评分##还是以深入介绍一些成功投资人为主题,作者似乎和很多人交往很深入,我觉得是会比以前的一些书深入一些,但芒格之类也很难写出太过于与众不同。记住了他讲巴菲特给子女留的钱足够他们尝试所有事物而又不会让他们无所事事。还有很多人都提到运动的快乐
评分##比尔米勒问彼得林奇:投资是否会因为岁月的积累而越来越轻松? 彼得林奇回复:投资不会因岁月积累变得轻松,超速前进或完全停下只能选其一!
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