_1929_ by Andrew Ross Sorkin is a narrative history of the 1929 stock market crash that focuses on the people, decisions, and psychology that led to the Great Depression, rather than on abstract economic theory. It argues that the crash was the product of years of speculative excess, easy credit, weak regulation, and overconfidence among politicians, bankers, and investors who believed the boom could not end.[[ursummary](https://ursummary.com/1929-summary-book-review-andrew-ross-sorkin/)]​ ## Core storyline - The book traces the buildup during the Roaring Twenties: booming stock prices, widespread margin borrowing, and a widening gap between rich and poor that made the system fragile beneath the surface optimism.[[goodreads](https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/211179569-1929)]​ - Sorkin then reconstructs 1929 itself almost day by day, showing euphoria turning to panic as markets slide, interventions fail, and confidence collapses on Wall Street and Main Street alike.[[certuity](https://certuity.com/insights/book-review-1929-by-andrew-ross-sorkin/)]​ ## Key figures and institutions - The narrative follows more than 70–75 central actors, including Wall Street leaders like J.P. Morgan and Charles Mitchell and political figures such as Calvin Coolidge, Herbert Hoover, and Franklin D. Roosevelt.[[goodreads](https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/211179569-1929)]​ - It emphasizes how banks, brokers, and regulators interacted—often timidly or self‑interestedly—as warning signs mounted and leverage and speculation spiraled out of control.[[delawareinc](https://www.delawareinc.com/blog/1929-andrew-ross-sorkin-book-review/)]​ ## Themes and arguments - A central theme is that greed, hubris, and the belief that “this time is different” blinded elites and ordinary investors to mounting risks, turning a market correction into a systemic crisis.[[sites.prh](https://sites.prh.com/1929)]​ - Sorkin portrays the crash as a human drama and a cautionary tale: financial systems change, but recurring traits—hope, fear, herd behavior, and short memories—make crises likely to repeat in new forms.[[ursummary](https://ursummary.com/1929-summary-book-review-andrew-ross-sorkin/)]​ ## Aftermath and impact - The book follows the years immediately after 1929 to show how bank failures, policy missteps, and shattered public trust deepened the downturn and reshaped Americans’ faith in capitalism and government.[[historynerdsunited](https://historynerdsunited.com/2025/10/1929-by-andrew-ross-sorkin-book-review/)]​ - Rather than ending with a policy manifesto, Sorkin closes on the need for **humility**: no regulatory framework or market model can fully eliminate crises when human psychology and incentives remain unchanged.[[hbr](https://hbr.org/2025/11/lessons-from-market-crashes-past)]​ --- Here are some focused hashtag sets you can use for _1929: Inside the Greatest Crash in Wall Street History — and How It Shattered a Nation_ by Andrew Ross Sorkin.[[facebook](https://www.facebook.com/NYSE/posts/almost-a-century-ago-wall-street-was-forever-changed-in-the-global-epicenter-of-/1262172009288414/)]​ ## General book/author tags - #1929 - #AndrewRossSorkin - #Nonfiction - #HistoryBooks - #BookReview - #MustRead ## Finance and Wall Street - #WallStreet - #StockMarket - #Finance - #Investing - #MarketCrash - #EconomicHistory ## Crash and Great Depression - #GreatDepression - #StockMarketCrash - #BlackTuesday - #RoaringTwenties - #FinancialCrisis ## Thematic / lessons - #GreedAndFear - #Speculation - #RiskManagement - #MoneyHistory - #LessonsFromHistory ## Platform‑style bundles - For X/Twitter: #1929 #WallStreet #GreatDepression #AndrewRossSorkin #StockMarketCrash[[facebook](https://www.facebook.com/NYSE/posts/almost-a-century-ago-wall-street-was-forever-changed-in-the-global-epicenter-of-/1262172009288414/)]​ - For Instagram/Bookstagram: #1929 #Nonfiction #HistoryBooks #Finance #WallStreet #Bookstagram[[instagram](https://www.instagram.com/p/DRbktA1AUQz/)]​