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Lady_Visenya

Lady_Visenya@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 7 months ago

A sort of kinda reader who is down to try a decentralized website.

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Some parts made me go "WOW THIS IS AMAZING, and other parts made me go, "I'm not so sure about that". So take what works for you, and leave what doesn't.

5 stars

Content warning Spoilers!

Nomi Prins: All the Presidents' Bankers : The Hidden Alliances that Drive American Power (2014) 5 stars

An incredible chronological explanation of how Banker's cultivated their relationships with Presidents of the past

5 stars

I finished listening to All The President's Bankers by Nomi Prins

I think it's her best book (reading chronologically from earliest release to latest, so this doesn't include the 2 books released after this one) yet! I will say, it's a big book, it gets detailed, it's dense, and that's really nothing new with Nomi Prins. Is it fun to read??? Um...depends on your definition of fun but I will say that I enjoyed it.

What I love in particular is how she goes chronologically, starting with bankers going to Jekyll Island to create the Federal Reserve. She discusses how bankers went from hiding in the shadows to get banker friendly legislation into government. She discusses bankers relationship with each president of the time. And slowly overtime with money, the media and time the bankers while no longer in the shadows have create enough pull in government to make it …

Review of 'It takes a pillage' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

To be honest I mostly skimmed this book. While this book reads easier than Other People's Money (and it shorter), it is still incredibly dense and detailed. I generally could do well when she was writing in a more general sense about what was happening, but when she began to write about individual people it just got difficult to keep track of them.

But it's great way to show exactly how these individuals create country wide chaos, but I may not always remember the names throughout the book is all.

The concepts brought up here are different than Other's People Money, the themes are the same because...well greed. It's just done in a different way this time.

Generally a well thought out and informative book.

Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex: Spare (2022, Random House Publishing Group) 3 stars

Review of 'Untitled 3806' on 'Goodreads'

1 star

I never previously intentionally consumed media about the Royal Family. I just didn't have an interest in reading about them.

Then Prince Harry left and I was somewhat intrigued, but still not enough to follow the journey.

Then I saw this book and I read the synopsis and thought, oh his story sounds like it could be relatable. Not being astronomically rich but being the scapegoat, the black-sheep. Reading how he was really treated as a backup plan sounded incredibly intriguing given the context of his upbringing.

But I haven't even gotten through the first part of the book yet and it's unbearably boring. There are glimmers of this book where I feel empathy and compassion, but really the way this book is written overall was boring.

In between those glimpses of compassion I have for him, the book is a pain to read. So I'm officially putting this book …

Connie Zweig, Steven Wolf, Connie Zweig, Steven Wolf: Romancing the shadow (Paperback, 1999, Wellspring/Ballantine) 4 stars

Review of 'Romancing the shadow' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Overall, this was a great book. However, there were certainly times when I begin to find myself bored. Especially when there was a lot of discussion about the different gods/goddess. Definitely an intriguing concept, at the same time, it gets repetitive and boring to read.

I'd recommend this book to someone who wants to learn more about shadow work still. This book was enlightening in many ways and I believe people could learn a lot about themselves based on what they learn through this book.

Personally, since I've already had a base knowledge of shadows work, I found this book to really get interesting in after going beyond the parent/child relationships. However, that part definitely put down a great foundation for the rest of the book. Once I got to the last 2 chapters I was ready to move on to another book.

Nomi Prins: Jacked (Paperback, 2006, Polipoint Press) 5 stars

Review of 'Jacked' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Nomi Prins delivered another jam packed book, and this time, it was way easier to read!

Compared to her previous book "Other People's Money", it is understandable, clear, and direct. This book is also a lot shorter, and has a much more impactful message. It does start out a bit dry, but as the book continued I felt more and more invested.

She beautifully describes the importance of having a government that actually looks out for the people. How meaningful it is when the people who make this country the what it is are taken care of by the very government that serves them.

Her message really resonated with me, and the way she brought these interviews together to describe the wider issue was really grounding.

It brings these large country wide issues down to the individual person. Showing the disconnect between the government and its people.

I'd definitely recommend …

Yung Pueblo: Clarity & Connection (Paperback, 2021, Andrews McMeel Publishing) 3 stars

Author of inward In Clarity & Connection, Yung Pueblo describes how intense emotions accumulate in …

Review of 'Clarity & Connection' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

I really wanted to love this book, but as I got through the first half, I wasn't really liking it, it wasn't until the "Growth" chapter that I liked some of the pages. But overall, it didn't really love it.

I don't want to be too harsh, I was excited to begin reading it. However, as I began reading through, it became repetitive. It feels as though it's trying to force deep feelings that aren't showing up for me. Perhaps a feeling of...connection to the reader and to provide a sense of clarity to the reader. I did not feel either of those. Then when I got to the Growth chapter, and I found the pages that I could connect with and brought clairty to some ideas I may have thought about before. So I have mixed feelings.

The book has a lot of "you" statements, which is not bad, …

Nomi Prins: Other People's Money : The Corporate Mugging of America (2004) 4 stars

Review of "Other People's Money : The Corporate Mugging of America" on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This is normally not the kind of book I would pick up and decide to read. However, getting involved in the APEs community after the GME sneeze, I was beginning to learn some of the corruption that was taking place. Nomi Prins name had come up in the Superstonk community and it was then that I decided I was gonna try to read her books.

This is the second book I've read by her, however the first non-fiction book I read by her. This book reminded me about my smooth brain when it comes to finance. I will say though, I certainly gained a few wrinkles at least. No doubt, after reading this book. However there are still many things to learn before I really truely comprehend this book.

From what I do understand is that no matter the time, there is always corruption going on, and it goes back …

Leila Khan, immigrant, is working at a Wall Street diner when she meets banker Roderick …

Review of 'Black Tuesday' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

To be honest I came across this book because my husband has done an incredible amount of reading about the stock market since January 2021. The month that GameStop Stock (GME) had the epic sneeze and when many brokers prevented retail investors from buying into GME.

While that was the beginning of our story, it has continued into much more than that. So eventually, we found Nomi Prins. We bought 6 of her books to get the perspective of someone who's been on the inside. I began reading Black Tuesday, thinking it was going to be a historical account of the 1929 market crash, so I thought it would be a good start. Then I realized after reading the back of the book, it's actually a novel! I was so surprised. I looked at the cover to find the small print of "A Novel" under the massive title "Black Tuesday". …

Malcolm Gladwell: David and Goliath (Hardcover, 2013, Little, Brown and Company) 4 stars

We all know that underdogs can win -- that's what the David versus Goliath legend …

Review of 'David and Goliath' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Impressions of part one:

I enjoyed the story about David and Goliath, though it was hard to follow at the beginning, once I got to the meat of the story it became much more interesting. Then the expansion to how "underdogs" seem to win with the example of the young girls basketball team was a fub story!

The book takes a turn to the school system to discuss the inverted U curve. Where briefly he talks about how "society" has a belief that is simply not true ( ex: smaller classes = better classes), but because people believe it, it still is prominent.

Impressions about Part 2:

It seems this portion of the book very loosely ties to the title of the book, and is about how "misfits" can succeed because of the trait/truama that made them a misfit. So if I had to guess how this ties to the …