Busted: Life Inside the Great Mortgage Meltdown
Veteran New York Times economics reporter Edmund L. Andrews was intimately aware of the dangers posed by easy mortgages from fast-buck lenders. But, eager to buy a home and start a new life, he gave in to temptation and began a surreal adventure into the mortgage mayhem that nearly wrecked our economy.



Busted weaves together the author's own ride to the edge of bankruptcy with the tragicomic stories of his lenders, the Wall Street pros behind them, and the policymakers in Washington who were oblivious until it was too late. The story takes Andrews to the offices of Alan Greenspan, the mansions of subprime-mortgage millionaires in southern California, a despondent deal makers' convention in Las Vegas, and Wall Street. Rich with on-the-ground reporting, Busted is a darkly humorous exploration of the cynicism and self-destructive judgment that led to America's biggest economic calamity in generations.
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Busted: Life Inside the Great Mortgage Meltdown
Veteran New York Times economics reporter Edmund L. Andrews was intimately aware of the dangers posed by easy mortgages from fast-buck lenders. But, eager to buy a home and start a new life, he gave in to temptation and began a surreal adventure into the mortgage mayhem that nearly wrecked our economy.



Busted weaves together the author's own ride to the edge of bankruptcy with the tragicomic stories of his lenders, the Wall Street pros behind them, and the policymakers in Washington who were oblivious until it was too late. The story takes Andrews to the offices of Alan Greenspan, the mansions of subprime-mortgage millionaires in southern California, a despondent deal makers' convention in Las Vegas, and Wall Street. Rich with on-the-ground reporting, Busted is a darkly humorous exploration of the cynicism and self-destructive judgment that led to America's biggest economic calamity in generations.
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Busted: Life Inside the Great Mortgage Meltdown

Busted: Life Inside the Great Mortgage Meltdown

by Edmund L. Andrews

Narrated by Dick Hill

Unabridged — 8 hours, 7 minutes

Busted: Life Inside the Great Mortgage Meltdown

Busted: Life Inside the Great Mortgage Meltdown

by Edmund L. Andrews

Narrated by Dick Hill

Unabridged — 8 hours, 7 minutes

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Overview

Veteran New York Times economics reporter Edmund L. Andrews was intimately aware of the dangers posed by easy mortgages from fast-buck lenders. But, eager to buy a home and start a new life, he gave in to temptation and began a surreal adventure into the mortgage mayhem that nearly wrecked our economy.



Busted weaves together the author's own ride to the edge of bankruptcy with the tragicomic stories of his lenders, the Wall Street pros behind them, and the policymakers in Washington who were oblivious until it was too late. The story takes Andrews to the offices of Alan Greenspan, the mansions of subprime-mortgage millionaires in southern California, a despondent deal makers' convention in Las Vegas, and Wall Street. Rich with on-the-ground reporting, Busted is a darkly humorous exploration of the cynicism and self-destructive judgment that led to America's biggest economic calamity in generations.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

"As I write in February 2009, I am four months past due on my mortgage and bracing for foreclosure proceedings to begin." Thus begins this cautionary and critical examination of the housing crisis, a story that turned personal when New York Times economics reporter Andrews got caught up in the housing bubble after falling in love with a woman and a house. Bringing in $120,000 a year in salary-most of which went to child support and alimony to his ex-wife, Andrews says he was able to get a "don't ask, don't tell" mortgage with the assumption that his new wife, Patty, would be able to get a job to keep them afloat, an expectation that didn't work out as planned. Because of his economics journalism background, Andrews says he "should have avoided the mortgage catastrophe," and he castigates himself as well as fellow borrowers, the financial industry that took advantage of them and a government that didn't put the brakes on the crisis that many economists warned about but that Alan Greenspan, the Bush administration and others ignored. This deeply personal exposé is timely and sobering in its candor. (June)

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Tom Vanderbilt - The New York Times Book Review

Andrews’s autopsy on his mortgage and the conditions that helped produce it is sharp and at times mordantly funny.

Michelle Singletary - The Washington Post

Read Busted for the insight. . . .The president and every member of Congress should read this book.”

David Warsh - Economic Principals

A fascinating meditation on the experience of the crisis from the point of view of those facing foreclosure.

James Pressley - Bloomberg

Andrews uses his travails as a prism for viewing the forces behind the bubble. . . . Step by step, he investigates the institutions that gave him the rope with which to hang himself.

Mary Whaley - Booklist

Provides important information on the recent mortgage debacle and the hazards of consumer debt. A must-read...

James R. Hagerty - The Wall Street Journal

[T]he value of this vividly written history is in the way it helps to explain how our country reached the point where about one out of 10 home mortgages is either overdue or in foreclosure. Some people blame lax regulation. Others point to loose monetary policy at the Federal Reserve and greed on Wall Street.
Mr. Andrews's book makes it clear that the real culprit is human nature.

Jim Weiker - Columbus Post Dispatch

The fact that lenders were happy to provide the money lies at the heart of Andrews' compelling book: Borrowers and lenders alike were drunk on credit and blind to the risks.

The New York Times Book Review

Andrews’s autopsy on his mortgage and the conditions that helped produce it is sharp and at times mordantly funny.— Tom Vanderbilt

The Wall Street Journal

[T]he value of this vividly written history is in the way it helps to explain how our country reached the point where about one out of 10 home mortgages is either overdue or in foreclosure. Some people blame lax regulation. Others point to loose monetary policy at the Federal Reserve and greed on Wall Street.
Mr. Andrews's book makes it clear that the real culprit is human nature.— James R. Hagerty

Columbus Post Dispatch

The fact that lenders were happy to provide the money lies at the heart of Andrews' compelling book: Borrowers and lenders alike were drunk on credit and blind to the risks.— Jim Weiker

The Washington Post

Read Busted for the insight. . . .The president and every member of Congress should read this book.— Michelle Singletary

Economic Principals

A fascinating meditation on the experience of the crisis from the point of view of those facing foreclosure.— David Warsh

Bloomberg

Andrews uses his travails as a prism for viewing the forces behind the bubble. . . . Step by step, he investigates the institutions that gave him the rope with which to hang himself.— James Pressley

Booklist

Provides important information on the recent mortgage debacle and the hazards of consumer debt. A must-read...— Mary Whaley

Product Details

BN ID: 2940170634583
Publisher: Tantor Audio
Publication date: 08/03/2009
Edition description: Unabridged
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