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The Big Rich: The Rise and Fall of the Greatest Texas Oil Fortunes

2010-11-07 
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The Big Rich: The Rise and Fall of the Greatest Texas Oil Fortunes 去商家看看

 The Big Rich: The Rise and Fall of the Greatest Texas Oil Fortunes


基本信息·出版社:Penguin Press HC, The
·页码:480 页
·出版日期:2009年01月
·ISBN:1594201994
·International Standard Book Number:1594201994
·条形码:9781594201998
·EAN:9781594201998
·装帧:精装
·正文语种:英语

内容简介 In The Big Rich, bestselling author and Vanity Fair special correspondent Bryan Burrough chronicles the rise and fall of one of the great economic and political powerhouses of the twentieth century?Texas oil. By weaving together the epic sagas of the industry?s four greatest fortunes, Burrough has produced an enthralling tale of money, family, and power in the American century.

Known in their day as the Big Four, Roy Cullen, H. L. Hunt, Clint Murchison, and Sid Richardson were all from modest backgrounds, and all became patriarchs of the wealthiest oil families in Texas. As a class they came to be known as the Big Rich, and together they created a new legend in America?the swaggering Texas oilman who owns private islands, sprawling ranches and perhaps a football team or two, and mingles with presidents and Hollywood stars.

The truth more than lives up to the myth. Along with their peers, the Big Four shifted wealth and power in America away from the East Coast, sending three of their state?s native sons to the White House and largely bankrolling the rise of modern conservatism in America. H. L. Hunt became America?s richest man by grabbing Texas?s largest oilfield out from under the nose of the man who found it; he was also a lifelong bigamist. Clint Murchison entertained British royalty on his Mexican hacienda and bet on racehorses?and conducted dirty deals?with J. Edgar Hoover. Roy Cullen, an elementary school dropout, used his millions to revive the hapless Texas GOP. And Sid Richardson, the Big Four?s fun-loving bachelor, was a friend of several presidents, including, most fatefully, Lyndon Johnson.

The Big Four produced offspring who frequently made more headlines, and in some cases more millions, than they did. With few exceptions, however, their fortunes came to an end in a swirl of bitter family feuds, scandals, and bankruptcies, and by the late 1980s, the era of the Big Rich was over. But as Texas native Bryan Burrough reveals in this hugely entertaining account, the profound economic, political, and cultural influence of Texas oil is still keenly felt today.
作者简介 Bryan Burrough is a special correspondent at Vanity Fair and the author of numerous bestselling books, including Barbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco (with John Helyar) and Public Enemies: America?s Greatest Crime Wave and the Birth of the FBI, 1933-1934. A former reporter for The Wall Street Journal, he is a three-time winner of the John Hancock Award for excellence in financial journalism.
编辑推荐 ?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 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 author?and native Texan?who writes, as he always does, with enormous insight and panache. The Big Rich has all the hallmarks of a classic American saga.?
?David Margolick, author of Beyond Glory: Joe Louis vs. Max Schmeling, and a World on the Brink

?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 a petroleum-based Lord of the Rings. This is, of course, a compliment? In Burrough?s captivating story, done with the same keen eye on excess as his corporate classic Barbarians at the Gate, it?s 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.?
? GQ

?Lively?impeccably rendered? 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.?
?Mimi Schwartz, The New York Times Book Review

?A Lone Star epic? Burrough introduces his protagonists with a novelist?s eye for detail. ? Though this book forms an epitaph for a bygone era, it?s not without relevance today.?
?Bloomberg

?It would be hard to ask for a literally or figuratively rich cast of characters than those in The Big Rich? Nicely detailed and suspenseful.?
?Harry Hurt III, The New York Times Business Section

?Eminently readable.?
?Texas Monthly

?Winning?well researched and briskly told. Burrough has produced an indispensable guide to the knotty fascination that Texas spurs in the imagination.?
? BookForum

?Here at Capitol Annex, we get a fair number of books to review. Rarely do we come across one that we can so highly recommend? The Big Rich is simply a ?must read.?
? The Capitol Annex

?Capitalism at its most colorful oozes across the pages of this engrossing study of independent oil men? This is a portrait of capitalism as white-knuckle risk taking, yielding fruitful discoveries for the fathers, but only sterile speculation for the sons? a story that resonates with today?s economic upheaval.?
?Publishers Weekly (starred review)

?The 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.?
?St. Louis Post-Dispatch

?Burrough?invokes a tale of bitter competition, family feuds, booms, and bankruptcies that more than lives up to the legends.?
?Booklist (starred review)

?An entertaining look at the larger-than-life histories of the incomprehensibly rich and powerful.?
?Library Journal

?Full of schadenfreude and speculation?and solid, timely history too.?
? Kirkus Reviews

?First-class entertainment.?
?Jonathan Yardley, The Washington Post

?What?s 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??[The Big Rich] is a ripping? read from start to finish. At the end of it those of less ample fortunes will feel their Schadenfreude richly indulged.?
?The Economist
专业书评 From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Capitalism at its most colorful oozes across the pages of this engrossing study of independent oil men. Vanity Fair special correspondent Burrough (coauthor, Barbarians at the Gate) profiles the Big Four oil dynasties of H.L. Hunt, Roy Cullen, Clint Murchison and Sid Richardson, along with their cronies, rivals, families and, in Hunt's case, bigamous second and third families. The saga begins heroically in the early 20th-century oil boom, with wildcatters roaming the Texas countryside drilling one dry hole after another, scrounging money and fending off creditors until gushers of black gold redeem them. Their second acts as garish nouveaux riches with strident right-wing politics are entertaining, if less dramatic. Decline sets in as rising production costs and cheaper Middle Eastern oil erode profits, and a feckless, feuding second generation squanders family fortunes on debauchery and reckless investment—H.L.'s sons' efforts in 1970 to corner the silver market bankrupted them and almost took down Wall Street. This is a portrait of capitalism as white-knuckle risk taking, yielding fruitful discoveries for the fathers, but only sterile speculation for the sons—a story that resonates with today's economic upheaval. (Jan. 27)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* The Texas oil fortunes forged by independent oilmen, known as wildcatters, had its roots in the first oil strikes during the 1890s, but it was during the Great Depression that Roy Cullen, Clint Murchison, Sid Richardson, and H. L. Hunt, known as the Big Four, rose to affluence in Texas society to become the Big Rich. By the 1950s, these families emerged as some of the richest in America, yet almost no one outside the insular world of Texas oil?even knew they existed. The most colorful of them, H. L. Hunt, was a bigamist with three separate families that he managed to keep secret from each other for years. His sons, Bunker and Herbert, are famous for their botched attempt to corner the silver market that nearly brought down the entire financial system in 1981. Burrough chronicles three generations of these oilmen, whose legacy includes the birth of the ultraconservative political movement and the archetype of the flamboyant Texas oilman with scores of ranches and airplanes, wielding the power of a J. R. Ewing. Burrough, a special correspondent at Vanity Fair and author of numerous best-selling books, invokes a tale of bitter competition, family feuds, booms, and bankruptcies that more than lives up to the legends. --David Siegfried