Spear's Book Awards: Winners
The inaugural Spear’s Book Awards, celebrating the very best books of the year – from finance to fiction – took place today, June 30th, 2009, at a glamorous literary lunch held at the Landau restaurant in the five-star Langham, London.
House of Cards
This is two books in one, and both of them are thrillers. Cohan, whose last book was an equally page-turning account of the history of Lazards, has plenty of material in Bear Stearns.
Spear's Book Awards: Vote Here
Vote here for your novel of the year in the Spear's Book Awards. Your vote counts!
Spear's Book Awards Shortlist Announced
Click here to view the full shortlist for the inaugural Spear's Book Awards, to be held on June 30th at the Langham, London
Caroline Michel
To celebrate the Spear's Book Awards on June 30th, Caroline Michel, one of the country's top literary agents and CEO of the PFD agency, has written the Spear's Diary for the forthcoming summer issue.
Spear's Book Awards Longlist
Click here to view the full longlist for the inaugural Spear's Book Awards, to be held on June 30th at the Langham hotel, London
Nicholas Coleridge
The great and the good from every tribe of London society turned out last night to celebrate the launch of Nicholas Coleridge's new book, Deadly Sins. (The guests were committing at least three of the seven at any given moment.)
See pictures from the party here.
Panic! The Story of Modern Financial Insanity
Although there are a couple of dry extracts from official reports, the bulk of Panic! consists of ground-breaking reports, enlightening interviews and supple commentary. It even includes a couple of satirical pieces.
The Man Who Owns the News
As Michael Wolff notes in his intriguing new biography of Murdoch, the agreement about the Wall Street Journal was ‘publicly and shamelessly ignored’. Murdoch knows that promises to protect editorial integrity are as weak and unenforceable as they are vague and ambiguous, so he has few qualms about giving them.
The Partnership: A History of Goldman Sachs
Every financial-services firm pays homage to the importance of ‘teamwork’, regardless of the reality behind the rhetoric. When I was a lawyer on Wall Street, it was almost a truism that the people who talked most about the importance of being a ‘team player’ were those most out for themselves and the most likely to stab you in the back.
Books
Boomerang: The Meltdown Tour
Michael Lewis
Kyle Bass, a Texas-based hedge-fund manager who did well out of shorting the sub-prime property market before the 2008 financial crisis, used to play the international strategy board game Risk as a kid, which led him to find out everything about a tiny country called Iceland, which was a key strategic location in the game
The Gentry: Stories of the English
Adam Nicolson
How delicious the notion of the gentry is. How beautifully it shades into every kind of 19th-century fraudulence, into Eric Hobsbawm’s Invention of Tradition. How easily it locks on to the much later and altogether more middle-class idea of the gentleman
Zahawi and Hancock on 'Masters of Nothing'
Anne McElvoy
The Wide Blue Yonder
A new breed of Tory MPs emerged from the 2010 general election, and already some are making their mark. Anne McElvoy looks at two of Cameron’s cabal
HNW Events
Spear's/Speechly Bircham Seminar: How to be a philanthropist in the 21st century
21 February 2012
Spear's Young Turk Awards 2012
01 April 2012
Spear's Design for Living Awards 2012
01 May 2012
Spear's Wealth Insight Forum 2012
19 September 2012
The Diary
Mark Hix
04 Jan 2012
Amanda Palmer
22 Nov 2011
Patrick Perrin
11 Oct 2011
Nicky Haslam
05 Aug 2011
Stephen Webster
06 Jul 2011
