The Wolf Of Wall Street: How Money Destroyed A Wall Street Superman
Stock market multimillionaire at 26, federal convict at 36, he partied like a rock star, lived like a King, and barely survived his rise and fall as an American entrepreneurial icon.
Stock market multimillionaire at 26, federal convict at 36, he partied like a rock star, lived like a King, and barely survived his rise and fall as an American entrepreneurial icon.
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ISBN:
9780340953754 (0340953756)
Edition language: English
Category:
Non Fiction,
Autobiography,
Memoir,
Biography,
Book Club,
Media Tie In,
Movies,
Mystery,
Business,
Crime,
Biography Memoir
Series: The Wolf Of Wall Street (#1)
Diary of a douchebag (racist and homophobic to boot). One of the worst books I have ever read. A terribly written trip into a narcissists head that is about 521 pages too long. One star is way too much for this trash.
After Finishing Jordan Belfort's book, The Wolf of Wall Street, all I can say is wow. His story captures the American Dream, from Jordan starting out dirt-poor with $13 to his name, to owning a billion dollar a year brokerage firm. Not to mention his crazy stories, like sinking a 170 foot yacht! Or ...
Wolf of Wall Street1987 This is the story of Jordan Belfort and he's new on the job at Wall Street where commodities are bought and sold continusously during the day.Follows his life as he learns from others how to get ahead. Many marriages, hookers, drugs, liquor help him succeed.Liberties that co...
What an entertaining read. Jordan Belfort has done it all to the point of madness! From Wall Street to addictions, family, friends and illegal activity, this candid story of his rise and fall leaves nothing to the imagination. One might say that his account is over-the-top, but when you have million...
I feel like this book was really strong around when I got 3/4 of the way into it. As if that's where either the author hit his stride or he had actually started out with that story and wrote to then end and then went back around and wrote the beginning. The first three-fourths of the book was really...