Category Archives: Book Reviews

Book Review- How to Write a Lot

How to Write a Lot
By Paul Silvia, 2007

how to write a lot

How to Write a Lot discusses the not-so-secret secrets of academic writing. The main argument of the book can be distilled into this sentence: Schedule your writing time, and stick to the schedule so that writing becomes a habit. Prolific writers write according a schedule. Binge writers, never finding time for writing and always facing deadlines, don’t end up writing much.

This book was a quick read and funny in places. The introductory chapters and the chapter about style were the most useful for me. The rest of the book delved a little too deeply into the specifics of writing in the psychology field. The details about how to write journal articles and books focused upon psychology articles/books, but some insights can be gleaned for any field.

One of my goals is to begin to structure my time more wisely this summer. Here’s hoping that I begin to write a lot.

Book Review- Why I Left Goldman Sachs

Why I Left Goldman Sachs
by Greg Smith, 2012

why i left goldman

This book, which grew out of a New York Times editorial, chronicles one man’s experience at the investment bank Goldman Sachs from around 2000 to 2012. It details Greg’s rise from lowly intern to vice president. Though, let’s not get ahead of ourselves here, Goldman Sachs gives out the title Vice President to thousands of employees. Greg felt the need to write the book to tell the world how far the values and humanity of Wall Street have fallen. No longer are investment banks looking out for their customer’s interests. Instead, they claim no responsibility for the customer’s actions, and they constantly attempt to market structured products to the customer that promise big commissions for the Wall Street firm.

I have never liked finance. I’ve never seen the appeal in working in an industry that moves money around in an effort to make the money reproduce. A lot of the financial industry seems intentionally deceptive to the interested outsider. This semester, I took a course in Asset Pricing Theory to get a grasp on the terminology in the finance field. It also fulfilled a breadth requirement that I have as a PhD student in the business school. This book and class confirmed my distrust and dislike of finance. The course alluded to the practice of creating complicated derivative investments meant to be difficult to price and track. The book confirmed this practice, and it told how Wall Street employees focus on trying to sell these “assets” to customers. The banks no longer feel the need to look out for their customers (if they ever did in the first place) and are only interested in their own bottom line.

It’s sad how much money these firms and their employees make. The allure of getting rich “out-smarting” other people on Wall Street is constantly stealing brilliant mathematicians/physicists/statisticians/etc. from useful work to work in hedge funds, investment banks, and as day-trading quants. Just last week, I was told that my friend’s husband, who is a Physics PhD, is thinking of working for a hedge fund instead of working in physics post-graduation. Finance is an arms race to have the best mathematical models. However, I don’t see a lot of spillover good from the development of these financial models to more useful fields. It’s an arms race for its own sake, and it’s a shame that so many brilliant people get caught up in it.

Bottom line: This book is a good choice if you want to learn a bit about the values of Wall Street. I also used it to get familiar with some of the financial terminology, in case it is relevant to my studies in the business school. I listened to the audio tape.