Shortfall: Family Secrets, Financial Collapse, And A Hidden History Of American Banking
by Alice Echols /
2017 / English / EPUB
9.4 MB Download
Shortfall
Shortfall opens with a surprise discovery in an
attic—boxes filled with letters and documents hidden for more
than seventy years—and launches into a fast-paced story that
uncovers the dark secrets in Echols’s family—an upside-down
version of the building and loan story at the center of Frank
Capra’s 1946 movie,
opens with a surprise discovery in an
attic—boxes filled with letters and documents hidden for more
than seventy years—and launches into a fast-paced story that
uncovers the dark secrets in Echols’s family—an upside-down
version of the building and loan story at the center of Frank
Capra’s 1946 movie,It’s a Wonderful Life
It’s a Wonderful Life. In a
narrative filled with colorful characters and profound insights
into the American past,
. In a
narrative filled with colorful characters and profound insights
into the American past,Shortfall
Shortfall is also the
essential backstory to more recent financial crises, from the
savings and loan debacle of the 1980s and 1990s to the subprime
collapse of 2008.
is also the
essential backstory to more recent financial crises, from the
savings and loan debacle of the 1980s and 1990s to the subprime
collapse of 2008.Shortfall
Shortfall chronicles the collapse of the building and
loan industry during the Great Depression—a story told in
microcosm through the firestorm that erupted in one hard-hit
American city during the early 1930s. Over a six-month period
in 1932, all four of the building and loan associations in
Colorado Springs, Colorado, crashed in an awful domino-like
fashion, leaving some of the town’s citizens destitute. The
largest of these associations was owned by author Alice
Echols’s grandfather, Walter Davis, who absconded with millions
of dollars in a case that riveted the national media. This book
tells the dramatic story of his rise and shocking fall.
chronicles the collapse of the building and
loan industry during the Great Depression—a story told in
microcosm through the firestorm that erupted in one hard-hit
American city during the early 1930s. Over a six-month period
in 1932, all four of the building and loan associations in
Colorado Springs, Colorado, crashed in an awful domino-like
fashion, leaving some of the town’s citizens destitute. The
largest of these associations was owned by author Alice
Echols’s grandfather, Walter Davis, who absconded with millions
of dollars in a case that riveted the national media. This book
tells the dramatic story of his rise and shocking fall.