This is what George Bernard Shaw might have called An Intelligent Person's Guide to the Crisis of Modern Capitalism, and everyone ought to read it
Robert Harris, Sunday Times
Original . . . beautifully written . . . both entertaining and profoundly anger-inducing
Chris Blackhurst, Evening Standard
The route map to the crazed world of contemporary finance we have all been waiting for. John Lanchester's superb book is everything its subject - the 2008 crash - was not: namely lucid, beautifully contrived, comprehensible to the reader with no specialist knowledge - and most of all devastatingly funny
- Will Self,
Wickedly funny . . . Good humor and good company will be the things that'll get us through
Dwight Garner, New York Times
Endlessly witty, but the wit is underpinned by a tremendous, unembarrassed anger and moral lucidity. A superb guide which will turn any reader into an expert within the space of 200 pages.
Jonathan Coe
Explains the madness of modern capitalism with razor-sharp insight, brilliant clarity and a refreshing dose of humour. A great book.
John O'Farrell
Scarier than Thomas Harris
Nicci French
John Lanchester's newfound mission: to explain the world of finance to the general public . . . The result is the perfect read for anyone still wondering what went wrong and why. Unless you'd rather they didn't know
Bloomberg
Literary and profound . . . a master explainer with an excellent grasp of sophisticated finance
Christopher Caldwell, The Daily Beast
Acidic, frightening, and sharply funny . . . a better book about the global meltdown than any other to date
EW.com
John Lanchester's Whoops! Why Everyone Owes Everyone and No One Can Pay is the unbelievable true story of the economic crisis.
We are, to use a technical economic term, screwed. The cowboy capitalists had a party with everyone's money and now we're all paying for it. What went wrong? And will we learn our lesson - or just carry on as before, like celebrating surviving a heart attack with a packet of Rothmans?
John Lanchester travels with a cast of characters - including reckless banksters, snoozing regulators, complacent politicians, predatory lenders, credit-drunk spendthrifts, and innocent bystanders to understand deeply and genuinely what is happening and why we feel the way we do.
'Devastatingly funny ... the route map to the crazed world of contemporary finance we have all been waiting for'
Will Self
'Bang on the money'
Independent
'Explains the crisis in a way that actually sticks ... to my amazement, I finally grasp it'
Janice Turner, The Times
'Endlessly witty ... will turn any reader into an expert within the space of 200 pages'
Jonathan Coe
'Terrific ... there is no better guide to the crazy world of high finance'
GQ
John Lanchester is a journalist, novelist and winner of the Whitbread First Novel Award. His fiction includes Mr Philips, The Debt to Pleasure and Capital. He is a regular contributor to the London Review of Books and the New Yorker, with a monthly column in Esquire.