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Anatomy of Greed: Telling the Unshredded Truth from Inside Enron

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Anatomy of Greed: Telling the Unshredded Truth from Inside Enron
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Brian Cruver
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:384
Dimensions(mm): Height 222,Width 146
ISBN/Barcode 9780786712052
ClassificationsDewey:333.79
Audience
General
Professional & Vocational
Illustrations 8 pages of b&w photographs

Publishing Details

Publisher Avalon Publishing Group
Imprint Avalon Publishing Group
Publication Date 1 September 2003
Publication Country United States

Description

Young, brash, sporting a shiny new MBA, and obscenely overpaid, Brian Cruver epitomized the Enron employee when he first entered the company's Houston office; and from day one he found himself a cog in the wheel of a venal greed machine. For the next nine months, he would witness firsthand the now-infamous corporate tragedy that he relates in these ruthlessly honest, often hilarious, and frequently disturbing pages. Here are the accounting tricks, insider stock trades, grossly lucrative fraudulent partnerships, and death dance to bankruptcy. Equally revealing, though, are Cruver's descriptions of everyday life at Enron: the cocky wheeling and dealing, intraoffice relationships, casual conversations at the shredder, and the insidious group-think that committed Enronians to the propaganda of flawed executives like Ken Lay, Jeffrey Skilling, and Andy Fastow. Out of their wreckage, Cruver has fashioned an arresting and cautionary morality tale for our time. Anatomy of Greed was the basis for the CBS-TV movie The Crooked E: a behind-the-scenes chronicle of the last days in the strange life of one of the world's richest, riskiest, and most corrupt corporations. Eight pages of telling photographs are included.

Author Biography

Brian Cruver was a senior manager at Enron until the collapse, was among the 4,500 workers laid off on December 3, 2001,the day after Enron filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. He lives in Houston.

Reviews

"A rueful memoir ... a worthy companion to such kindred works as The Late Show, Microserfs, and Barbarians at the Gate." "Brian Cruver's colorful tale ... won't be easily upstaged." "Fast-paced ... puts a human face on the ... scandals." "It sure is a good read.... Cruver is a good story-teller. His memoir is vivid and captures well the weirdness of a company in decline." "Succeeds in making sense of the whole mess while also generating sympathy for the hapless employees."