1929: Inside the Greatest Crash in Wall Street History and How It Shattered a Nation is a work of narrative financial history written by Andrew Ross Sorkin of the Wall Street crash of 1929, as well as the events leading up to it and its aftermath. The book was first published by Viking Press in 2025. It was a New York Times notable book of 2025 and made number two on The New York Times Best Seller list.

Background

The book's narrative is chronological and focuses on selected dates in a four-year period, starting with February 1, 1929, about seven months before the start of the crash. The crash started on the New York Stock Exchange, commonly referred to as ‘Wall Street’, after the Dow Jones Industrial Average reached an all-time closing high of 381.17 on September 3, 1929. The Wall Street crash of 1929 ended the great bull market and the Roaring Twenties and precipitated the Great Depression in the United States. The final chapter describes events of June 31, 1933, which roughly coincides with the middle of the Great Depression and the start of the recovery of the stock market. The players in this drama are bankers, business leaders, economists, journalists, speculators and officials of the New York Stock Exchange, the US government and the Federal Reserve. Sorkin admits that he spent eight years researching and writing the book and achieved an oeuvre with approximately one hundred pages of notes and references, many not previously published or analyzed. The book also contains a substantive index and a section entitled, ‘The Cast of Characters and the Companies they Kept,’ which lists the affiliations of the major characters in the book.

Synopsis

Financial institutions

The book outlines the pervasive optimism and unrelenting faith in the upward trajectory of stock prices on the part of investors, celebrities, government officials and particularly bankers. Many banks were involved in loans in the call money market which allowed the purchase of stocks on as little as ten percent margin. The actions of Charles Edwin Mitchell, Chairman and CEO of National City Bank and Thomas William Lamont of the House of Morgan are detailed. By the middle of 1929, these bankers had too much at stake to contemplate anything other than optimistic scenarios for stocks.

Speculators

William Crapo Durant was on the leading edge among Wall Street insiders on a trendy financial stratagem, the “stock pool.” Wealthy investors would pool their assets to purchase stock in a target company. They would inflate the stock price by judicious trades within the group. They would typically leak information to the press that a bullish operation was in progress to entice small investors to ride the coat-tails of the pool operators. At the high of the excitement, they would dump their shares at peak prices. This behavior was unethical, but not illegal and was a factor in driving stock prices to unsustainable levels in 1929. One notable exception among speculators was Jesse Livermore, who stated to a reporter at The New York Times that the market was overpriced and stocks were at “ridiculously high prices.” Jesse Livermore’s assessment of the stock market proved correct and by the end of October of 1929 Livermore had made $100 million on the short side of the market, that is, betting on stock prices to fall.

The Federal Reserve

President Herbert Hoover’s concern about rampant stock market speculation was well known to insiders and his pressure on the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates and consequently margin requirements for the purchase of stocks on credit eventually bore fruit. This action of the Federal Reserve, coupled with consistently negative comments by the economist Roger Babson were factors in precipitating the Wall Street crash of 1929.

Critical reception

There has been enthusiastic praise for the book, as well as critical reviews suggesting that Sorkin spent a significant portion of the narrative covering the lifestyles of the rich and famous, while his thesis that the bifurcation of society into rich and poor was causal to the crash was unproven. A strident review by The New York Times suggests that Sorkin’s halfhearted defense of the 1929 bankers is an indictment of the system he claims to love, while the little guy lost everything in a festival of fraud and theft for the titans.

See also