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Drawing on a wealth of sources, the author divides the history of money into three distinct stages. The first dates back nearly three millennia to the creation of coins in ancient Lydia (modern Turkey), whose best-known ruler, Croesus, has become a byword for affluence. The monetary market system spawned by the invention of coins, which eliminated the need to weigh gold for every transaction, eventually spread around the world, in the process destroying great empires and fostering development of a democratic and prosperous ancient Greek civilization. The Renaissance proved another turning point, bringing with it banks, paper money, and allied innovations that put paid to feudalism, opened the way for industrial capitalism, and financed the art and scholarship of the era. On the eve of the 21st century, according to Weatherford, the Global Village is about to enter an era of electronic money, which promises to produce socioeconomic, political, and cultural changes every bit as convulsive as those that racked earlier epochs. Which is not to say that the author deals in either doom or gloom. He simply offers a guided tour of the past and provides plausible scenarios for the future. Weatherford also studs his accessible text with scholarly delights that afford welcome respites from straightforward accounts of ATMs, currency speculation, the gold standard, hyperinflation, near money (food stamps, for example), and rates of exchange. Cases in point range from an appreciation of Edward Bellamy's prediction of credit cards in his utopian novel Looking Backward (1888) through a discussion of the ways in which L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900) made an allegorical case for bimetallism.
An entertaining, on-the-money introduction to precisely what makes the world go 'round.
APWORLDisHARD
Posted December 9, 2009
The History of Money, by Jack Weatherford, is an in-depth summary of how and why money came to be such a prominent part of our world. I felt that it was a well written book intended for the casually interested reader, instead of something to be used for information and facts. This, however, is a good thing, for it managed to keep my interest on something that seems like a boring topic. However, sometimes the repetitiveness in a few of the chapters was a definite annoyance. Over all, though, it is an interesting read that helps to explain how money and commerce managed to effect everything from the spread of Christianity to the start of the Renaissance.
While I did enjoy this book, I feel that only certain types of people should read this book, for at times it can be quite tedious. Only those with an invested interest in history would like this book. Also, some of Weatherford's ideas on the future economical techniques see quite farfetched and it is hard to quite grasp what he is trying to propose. As a whole though, he took a boring subject and turned it into readable nonfiction, though there could have been some improvements
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Posted December 14, 2009
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Overview
In his most widely appealing book yet, one of today's leading authors of popular anthropology looks at the intriguing history and peculiar nature of money, tracing our relationship with it from the time when primitive men exchanged cowrie shells to the imminent arrival of the all-purpose electronic cash card. 320 pp. Author tour. National radio publicity. 25,000 print.From the Hardcover edition.