Worshiped by Tea Party politicians but loathed by sane economists, gold has influenced American monetary policy and has exerted an irrational influence on the national psyche for centuries. It is an existential quest that extends to today, as millions of investors remain entranced by the metal, and as right-wing presidential candidates present it as the antidote to our economic woes. Acclaimed author James Ledbetter traces the origins of our national obsession, revealing how gold's sacred status dates from precolonial days when conquistadors fanatically searched the New World for the gilded city of El Dorado. From William Jennings Bryan's legendary Cross of Gold speech of 1896, to FDR's ban on private gold ownership, to Nixon's 1971 decision to float the dollar and detach it from gold, Ledbetter's "really superb treatment" (Julian Zelizer) expertly explores the controversies around this hallowed metal, investigating for the first time what our centuries-long fixation ultimately reveals about the American identity.
The Natural History of Clay
Alfred B. Searle
bookThe Substance of Civilization : Materials and Human History from the Stone Age to the Age of Silicon
Stephen L. Sass
bookPrisoners of History
Keith Lowe
audiobookIntroduction to Metal-Ceramic Technology : Third Edition
W. Patrick Naylor
bookViral Loop : The Ultimate Guide to Viral Marketing Techniques to Generate More Traffic and More Profit for Your Business
C.P. Mortimer
audiobookBold School : Old School Wisdom + New School Technologies = Blended Learning That Works
Weston Kieschnick
audiobookSiren Song
Seymour Stein
audiobookWhy Should the Devil Have All the Good Music?
Gregory Alan Thornbury
audiobookDancing on My Own : Essays on Art, Collectivity, and Joy
Simon Wu
audiobookSummary of The Rosie Effect
Paul Adams
bookWhat Is the Grass : Walt Whitman in My Life
Mark Doty
audiobookExtreme Cities
Ashley Dawson
audiobook