No so good
3
By madaboutmadmen
I don’t know if the subject matter or the writing style for this book didn’t sit well with me and perhaps it was a combination of both but this was the worst Michel Lewis book I have read. His books are “page turners” for me but not so much with this one. The last 50 pages or so were by far the most interesting and his conclusion that the money was never really missing from FTX is a conclusion that I have not previously seen. I am not sure what to make of that. In any event I would not recommend this as a must read.
Awful
1
By The Dread Pirate Roberta
I’m a huge fan of Lewis but this was terrible. I genuinely found myself wondering if I missed huge parts of the book multiple times. Skip it
Jaylin Lindsey
5
By Jaylin Lindsey
Jaceion
Save your time and money.
1
By double_g_1106
I have read most of Mr. Lewis' books and enjoyed them.
This isn't one of them.
Disappointed
2
By Paulippoi
I typically love Lewis’ books, but he got hoodwinked by SBF. He wasn’t as critical of his subjects as he usually is and the book’s contents just felt lazy.
love this book
5
By Jay account
it’s a story within stories. I enjoyed reading, Going Infinite, very much.
Suspend Judgement
5
By Wordspitting
Based on the reviews and near constant beating of the drum against SBF, I wanted a book that challenged the narrative with a good argument and evidence. Lewis is under no illusion about SBF's unconventional character but he resists drawing lazy conclusions. He provides insights into Ray and the bankruptcy court system that help to challenge what has come to be the unquestioned narrative.
Just OK
3
By Samnite100
Ok, not one of the best… many unsolved issues developing main characters.
Shocking propaganda
1
By Convekcity
This reads like a puff piece for a sociopathic criminal— a nice shade of red lipstick on a pig. Embarrassing book from Mr. Lewis
Totally biased
1
By Edwyers
Doesn’t talk at all about the fraud and defend SBF at all times instead of looking at it objectively and criticizing him for the choices he made to lose 8 billion dollars