As eager-beaver business school students, Rolfe and Troob garnered job offers as junior associates at the elite Wall Street investment bank Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, lured by dreams of wealth, glamour and power. Readers whose fascination with Wall Street shenanigans has been fueled by Michael Lewis's Liar's Poker will find this thorough rundown of an investment bank associate's daily routine sobering. By the time Rolfe and Troob were able to discern the key fact that the "investment banking community has long been an oligopoly, with only a handful of real players with the size and scale to drive through the big deals," they were already grappling with the gritty reality of performing grunt labor in an environment ruled by despotic senior partners who called innumerable meetings to set unrealistic deadlines and make superhuman demands on anybody within screaming distance. The authors' resulting disappointment and disaffection leaps off every page. Unfortunately, they take out their frustrations with indiscriminate potshots at such easy targets as word processors ("Christopher Street fairies"), copy center personnel ("a platoon of patriotic Puerto Ricans" they offhandedly refer to as "militants") and female research analysts (whom they describe as "under-sexed, eager-to-please"). Long before the hapless authors have stooped to expressing their fury at the bank by such puerile antics as urinating into a beer bottle while seated at a banquet table at the Christmas party, readers will have had enough. (Apr.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
John Rolfe grew up in the heart of Dixie. After stints at Virginia Tech and the University of Florida, he took a job doing broadcast research in New York City, convinced that "if I can make it there, I can make it anywhere." In 1993, after concluding that Frank Sinatra had sold him a bill of goods, John entered the Wharton School of Business, where he edited The Wharton Vulgarian. Following his sentence with DLJ, he was a principal with a private investment organization. Currently, John is a freelance man of sport and leisure, and is honing his panhandling skills for the next bear market.
Peter Troob grew up on the rough-and-tumble streets of Scarsdale, New York, and while in grade school starred in James and the Giant Peach. Peter attended Duke University, then worked for Kidder Peabody in New York City. In 1993 he entered the graduate program at the Harvard Business School, where he edited the humor section in the Harbus and wrote the "Kosher Korner" column. This made his mother proud. Peter is currently a partner with a private investment organization and is anticipating many happy years there.
毫无疑问,这是影响我职业选择最重要的一本书 还是在上学的时候,周五的一个下午,阳光很好,在中美中心的图书馆里翻了出来这本书,坐在阳台上一边晒太阳一边看,看着书中的主人翁用极度夸张、搞笑却又很酷的方式讲述自己在投行里受虐的故事,心里却渐渐有了个很cheap,很有自虐...
評分听人说过,如果你能熬过芝加哥的冬天那才能享受他的夏天。 MB这本书可算是投行的冬天吧。无数次在论坛上看到有人向对投行感兴趣的推荐此书。 言下之意,要是你了解了投行真实的阴暗面还能接受他,再来说你想做投行吧。 其实,不论你想不想做投行,此书都值得一读。Rolfe和Tro...
評分假期回家一路都在看《华尔街的大马猴》,它看起来是金融类的大作,但读起来像小说,趣味性十足,毫无枯燥的教导式的语言。 这本书让我们可以以第一人称的身份去感受华尔街投资银行里的精英们的生活。即深刻了解了投行的招聘面试、工作流程、人才管理方面的具体情况,...
評分像这世界上所有稀有资源一样,很牛逼的生活永远是充满着竞争杀机的富饶之地,因为所有芸芸众生都只有眼巴巴仰视的份,这份“看上去很牛逼”已经足够让人心里偷偷摸摸的虚荣心和欲望得到全身按摩然后吸取宇宙之精华为奋斗注入源源不断的活力。 而付出的代价是,每天工作20个小...
評分绝对是IB行业的反面宣传普及读本。无论是商学院的在校生还是有想通过B-school来创造机会去憧憬这个行业的在职者,亦或是non-financial industry workers,看了这本书之后都会对投行的工作状态和内容有深深地作呕感。以前的所有关于private club,caviar,cocktail party...
哈哈哈太好笑瞭
评分Funny&detailed description about IB life (entry level after B School). 1 Jan 2013 (CH version)
评分昨天讀罷本書感到其實投行和廣告業有許多相似之處,當然主要區彆還是錢,挺好玩的一部投行血淚史。epiphany一章最有趣,講主角淩晨3點獨自在辦公室m後頓悟人生不想從此這般lonely and horny毅然決然離開華爾街。
评分#把banking的每個部分都恰到好處地誇大,又幽默地讓人噴飯。最後一段金融危機是後來再加上去的,但很喜歡那段寫兩位作者之間友誼的結尾。
评分做到associate還能這麼搞笑真是不容易~~
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