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November 2009


Related Stories:
  • CHEAP AND CHEERFUL

    By taking thriftiness to extremes, China's Spring Airlines makes millions

  • PAINT AND CLICK

    By treating art as a short-term commodity play, a new generation of dealers is shaking up a staid profession

  • GRADE EXPECTATIONS

    A Beijing ratings agency poses a challenge to its powerful Western rivals

  • GLITTERING KOREA

    It's seen war, poverty and a 90s economic crash. Now South Korea is emerging as Asia's brightest powerhouse


The New Economics

Economic tomes from Robert Skidelsky and David Boyle & Andrew Simms among others

THE PICK OF THIS SEASON’S BUSINESS BOOKS...

WHY YOUR WORLD IS ABOUT TO GET A WHOLE LOT SMALLER
‘What the price of oil means for the way we live’ — the subtitle leads to another account of Peak Oil
By Jeff Rubin
Virgin Books
€22 ISBN 9781905264810

CHANGING LIVES CHANGING BUSINESS
Why retirement is disappearing and what it means for business, plus other demographic trends
By Michael Moynagh and Richard Worsley
A&C Black
€18 ISBN 9781408108475

THE MANAGEMENT MYTH
Elegant hatchet job on the management consultancy industry and the damage it’s done
By Matthew Stewart
Norton
€23 ISBN 9780393065534

INTO THE HEART OF THE MAFIA
A Journey Through the Italian South
By David Lane,
Profile Books
€18.00 ISBN 9781846682698
This book is a first-class work of investigative journalism by The Economist’s business correspondent for Italy. Exploiting contacts accrued over decades, Lane journeys through the Mezzogiorno — Italy’s toe and heel — asking heroic judges and embittered businessmen about the role the mafia still plays there. It’s large, it turns out. Elements of road trip mix freely with murder narratives and a profound sense of place and economy, leaving the reader with a non-tourist vision of Europe’s failed state, where the blackened grip of family feuds and anaemic democracy combine to devastating social and economic effect. Struck by the beauty but darkness of Reggio Calabria’s bergamot groves, the tree itself a “spontaneous mutation of bitter orange or lime,” it is then noted how in the late 1980s the ’Ndrangheta’s war there ended only after the loss of 600 lives.


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Tags:
Art & Books, Economy, Banking & Investments

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Related Stories:
  1. CHEAP AND CHEERFUL

    By taking thriftiness to extremes, China's Spring Airlines makes millions

    Go to Article »

  2. PAINT AND CLICK

    By treating art as a short-term commodity play, a new generation of dealers is shaking up a staid profession

    Go to Article »

  3. GRADE EXPECTATIONS

    A Beijing ratings agency poses a challenge to its powerful Western rivals

    Go to Article »

  4. GLITTERING KOREA

    It's seen war, poverty and a 90s economic crash. Now South Korea is emerging as Asia's brightest powerhouse

    Go to Article »




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