wouldn't waste your time. I've read it and as far as I can see Mr LeFevre basically tapped out all his mates and just bet big. Sometimes he won and like with any horse bet, you always hear of the one that won but you never hear of the many which you lost. Only for LeFevre lost other peoples money and decided to take his life in the end (oh boooo whooo sorry for him - yea right what about all the poor lenders eh? ). At least he had the decency to kill himself after loosing other peoples money whereas now a days it's just looked at by todays Mr LeFevres types as who cares? I'll go to court, ask for government assistance, bog it down in paperwork, the auditors will milk any credit left in the remaining assets if any?, and then a new crisis will happen and divert the attention to another Mr LeFevre and the cycle starts again. I can honestly say the only line in the book that has credit is "it's a bull market"