L'effet boule de neige: La biographie officielle de Warren Buffet by Alice Schroeder


L'effet boule de neige: La biographie officielle de Warren Buffet
Title : L'effet boule de neige: La biographie officielle de Warren Buffet
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 2361170477
ISBN-10 : 9782361170479
Language : French
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 970
Publication : First published January 1, 2008
Awards : Financial Times Business Book of the Year Shortlist (2008)

Warren Buffett est l'un des hommes les plus respectés au monde. Jamais encore l'investisseur légendaire d'Omaha n'avait écrit ses mémoires ou offert un aperçu de sa vie privée, jalousement protégée. Cet ouvrage livre enfin une vue sans précédent sur son travail, ses opinions, ses luttes, ses triomphes, ses folies et sa sagesse. C'est un livre que le monde attendait depuis longtemps… et le résultat en vaut la peine. Cette biographie complète de l'homme connu de tous comme « l'Oracle d'Omaha » a été rédigée par Alice Schroeder, auteure économique respectée et ancienne analyste financière, avec la coopération de Buffett lui-même. Il lui a consacré des centaines d'heures et lui a ouvert ses dossiers et son carnet d'adresses, lui permettant de contacter son épouse, ses enfants, ses amis et ses associés. De tout cela est né une analyse approfondie de sa philosophie de vie – probablement le compte rendu le plus complet que nous aurons jamais. Cet ouvrage détaille les principes et les idées qui ont fait l'incroyable fortune de Buffett, mais qui ont également enrichi les vies (et les comptes en banque) de ceux qui les ont adoptés. Il narre enfin la success story américaine la plus fascinante de notre ère.


L'effet boule de neige: La biographie officielle de Warren Buffet Reviews


  • Scott Dinsmore

    Why I Read this Book: Warren Buffett is the epitome of success in many ways for a lot of people. I had to find out the real story.

    Topics Covered:

    * Modeling
    * Internal Values
    * Value Investing
    * Trade offs of various forms of success
    * Understanding your purpose and priorities
    * Importance of Relationships

    Review:

    I preordered my copy of Snowball through Amazon the day it was announced. I will warn you that I am a fanatic. I make it out to Omaha each year for the Berkshire Hathaway meeting and it’s one of my favorite weekends learning lessons on life, business and of course investing. The foundation of my investment firm is based on the principles he made famous. Needless to say, I could not wait to get my copy.

    Nearly two months later, I have finally turned the last page. One thing is for sure, Alice Schroder managed not to spare a detail in the 830 odd pages. No doubt that the length of this biography is a symbol of the depth and fanatics of Warren’s life, which becomes clearer with each page. I believe that Alice could have spared some of the detail so be prepared for a dense read.

    I have been a student of Buffett and his approach for years, which made Snowball a logical progression in my ever-growing investing curriculum. Although for those of you looking for deep insight into Warren’s investment approach and steps on how to mimic it, you have come to the wrong place. There are hundreds of other titles that do a much better job of that (some of which you will see on my site). That value in this book instead was to get a window on the mind, life and thinking of the most financially successful person of our time.

    For years I have had my question prepared for Buffett at the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting, but I have yet to awaken early enough to secure a place in line. Shareholders and attendees willing to stand in line starting at around 3am are granted one question on a topic of their choosing. Mine is along the lines of “What was it that you told yourself, thought about and visualized when you were younger that made you certain that you would be one of the wealthiest people in the world one day? We have heard of your physical routine, but what about your psychology?” I believe The Snowball is my answer (although I hope to ask him again in Omaha next year).

    Snowball brings up plenty of realizations and surprises of Warren’s life, but for me more than anything, this was a lesson in modeling. Modeling is one of the most valuable tools available for success. Early on, the likes of Ben Franklin, Benjamin Graham and plenty more, discovered that if you learn how someone lives their life and the beliefs they possess, it is possible to model their actions and thinking to achieve similar results. Tony Robbins is the biggest promoter and teacher of this technique in today’s world. This tool is incredibly valuable in anyone’s tool chest to success. It’s a huge handicap to not put it to use on your journey. That is essentially what ReadingForYourSuccess comes down to. A guide on how to model the most successful authors, people and approaches I come across.

    Anyone looking to model Warren Buffett (and I know there are a lot of you out there) must read Snowball. Over the years I have worked hard to model what I’ve learned about Warren’s approach to investing and life. Outwardly it seems doable, but after spending two months and 830 pages peering through the window on his life, it has become glaringly clear why there is only one Warren Buffett.

    From the early years of childhood, Warren has had a one track mind about collecting as much money as possible. This has come at the regrettable sacrifice of various family interactions and relationships throughout his life. I wont get into the specifics but the eye-opener for me was that when it comes down to success, never forget that trade off’s exist around every corner. Only a true understanding of your life’s mission, purpose and definition of success will allow you to properly choose as these issues are presented. For Warren, he loved nothing more than analyzing businesses and building wealth. He obviously did not care about what it could buy, since he is still quite frugal and is giving it all back to society, but he loves the accumulation. This has taken top priority and there’s little doubt that he could have achieved what he has without the inhuman discipline that he’s displayed in his 78 years.

    Key Lessons:

    * Discipline is one on of the most valuable traits one can possess
    * There is no substitute for a firm set of values
    * The importance of giving back and philanthropy—there’s no pride in being the richest guy in the graveyard
    * ake every opportunity to teach, develop and give knowledge to others
    * Desire and commit to never stop learning

    This was a fundamental learning for me and I hope it presents a valuable example for you as well. While, building a successful investment business is very important to me, it does not rank as high as my health and my relationships and interactions with my family, friends and the love of my life. I am willing to accept this as I set my goals and expectations for my business and all other things important to me.

    Snowball is a wonderful guide to what it would really take to model the success of Warren Buffett. And just as it took an incredibly unique individual to become who Warren is today, it would take just as much to model him. You wonder though, even if you could model Warren, would you really want to? After learning the details provided by Schroder, I have a feeling fewer would be up to the task. This is a fantastic realization however. It is up to you to choose what traits and qualities you want to model about a mentor or teacher. Just as important as what you choose to model, is what you choose to leave behind. We do this everyday without knowing it, whether it’s with our parents, friends or significant others. Common sense says to take the desirable and leave the rest. As you reevaluate your modeling for this new year, keep this close in mind.

    We are all uniquely fortunate to be living and learning among the likes of such business and financial greatness. Never before have we seen a man with an internal set of rules and convictions (an “internal yardstick” as Buffett would call it) so strong that no one would be successful in throwing him off his finely calculated path to the top. Generations to come will listen in envy as we tell them of what we learned as we witnessed Warren amass his Snowball in real time. All the while giving those willing to listen, some of the most fundamental and priceless lessons on life, values, philanthropy, business and investing ever provided. If you have not taken advantage of these real time lessons, it’s not too late, but sadly that will not always be the case. If you’re up to it, dig into Snowball, but if not then you need not look further than any book store or a month’s worth of news papers to begin seeing all that Warren has been providing to us and society. The years are limited where it will still be real time. There is a strong dose to be had every year out in Omaha. Perhaps I’ll see you out there in 2009.

    -Reading for Your Success

  • Jordan

    After finished reading almost 800 pages book on biography of Warren Buffett most pressing question I have now is WHO THE HELL IS CHARLIE MUNGER?!?!!

    I was completely fascinated by the straight talking lesser known partner of Berkshire Hathaway. The few quotes of Charlie Munger in the book is enough to justify the poor writings elsewhere. There are so much fluff in the book, that gems of wisdom from Charlie Munger stood out. Once asked about technology stocks in late 1990s Munger once said "Even if you mixed raisins with turds, it's still turds."

    Munger once call Efficient Market Hypnosis as bullshits invented by academia.
    In 1980s Efficient Market Hypnosis became very popular in academia. The idea was you could use stock's volatility as measure of risk and market is extreme efficient. There's no point in trying to beat the market. Corollary drew from EMH was that successfully investors such as Warren and Munger are due to lucks not skills.

    Ideally, when I read a biography I would like know the person and go deep inside their heads and understand what motivate them. Despite extensive coverage of where Buffett took vacations every year this book does not make me feel I understand Buffett. There are a lot trivia about Buffett's life, but that's not something I want to read about.

    Warren Buffett is a nice guy, sometimes too nice. I got the impression that every CEOs should be utterly ruthless but he's not. Berkshire Hathaway, before it became a household name was originally a textile company owned by Buffett. The textile company was doing poorly ever since Buffett purchased it. Buffett kept it alive for longer than he should. Despite his legendary records, he also made some mistakes in his investments (e.g. Dexter shoe company).

    The key to success according to Buffett is pick your parents carefully. Buffett is big proponent of Ovarian Lottery. A person's success has a lot to with their environment where they grew up.

    Nevertheless I did learn a lot from the book.
    Base on reading of this book, I will need to add following books to my list.

    Poor Charlie's Almanack by Charlie Munger
    The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham
    The Gospel of Wealth Essays and Other Writings by Andrew Carnegie
    Liar's Poker by Michael Lewis
    How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie

  • James

    This was a disappointing book.
    At 834 pages plus notes and index there were a lot of words,
    but at least 80% were just gossip about who had a problem
    with drinking, drugs, hurt feelings etc etc etc.

    (NOTE: Just read Buffett, The making of an American capitalist,
    That book is 1000 times better: 22 March 2012)

    The trivia even included who their babysitter married!!!

    Over the years I've read often about the remarkable partnership of Buffett and Munger,
    but very very little of that is mentioned in this book.

    And clearly Mr B didn't proof the book, because it's rife with factual errors and silly statements.

    For instance on p530 "volatility - how likely it was to deviate from the market average."
    That just doesn't match any definition of the word.

    The very next paragraph,
    " sold a group of stocks short to help cushion results if the market went down"

    Not true, the major cost of investing is the cost of capital,
    if you have say $100,000 you can buy that much stock long.
    THEN, you can use it as collateral to SHORT up to $100,000 worth of stock
    AT NO EXTRA COST.
    And, some brokerage firms will share the interest earned on the proceeds of the short sale, even more profit.

    You double the utility of your capital.
    If you pick right and your timing is right you have double the profits for a given amount of capital.

    If you think stocks might go down, you sell some you think are fully priced.
    You don't "hedge".

    2 paragraphs further,
    "They defined risk as not losing money"
    As Munger might say: "twaddle and bullshit"
    Risk is the CHANCE of loss.

    On page 545 her explanation of what a derivative is is so goofy I'll leave it to you to read.

    She makes it sound like all derivatives are a type of insurance.
    CDS's are that, but they are not really derivatives,
    they're just called that to avoid coming under regulations governing insurance.

    A true derivative is an option or future that DERIVES it's value from the changing value
    of something else, like a stock, a metal, food, energy...

    Other stupid sentences: page 754
    "Surviving a first bout with (oral cancer) carries a twentyfold greater risk of recurrence."
    !!!!!
    20 fold greater than what?????
    NOT surviving the first bout?

    She mentioned the 1974 Forbes mag article where Buffett is alleged to have said:
    "I feel like an oversexed man in a harem"

    That was my first introduction to Buffett and his remarkable career.
    She failed to mention, I guess she just doesn't know,
    that's not what he really said.

    A few years later Forbes admitted they bowdlerized his remark,
    he really said: "I feel like an oversexed man in a whorehouse"

    Small point, but for 834 pages and many years spent writing this book,
    the author didn't research the early writings about the man very well.

    I had thought that a book about a guy who made $200 Billion dollars for himself and others
    would be both pleasant and interesting.

    Wrong, the misery index in this book is higher than any other book I've seen
    that is even slightly related to finance.

    At times I felt I was reading a Thomas Hardy novel,
    where on every page a new and more awful suffering is impinged on the protagonist.

    As the book draws to an end the misery is accelerated with one person after another dying
    of increasingly painful, disfiguring, and debilitating types of cancer.

    Spelled out in graphic detail.

    One thing I'm sure of, this won't be the last book written about Warren Buffett.

    And the next one has about a 99% probability of being better.

    He's still my hero.

  • Bharath

    As one of the most successful investors Warren Buffett is an enigma. I have read about him in bits and pieces. This has to be among the most comprehensive biographies one can read.

    The book starts with what Warren Buffett tells Alice in 2003 - "Balzac said that behind every fortune lies a crime. That's not true at Berkshire". The world associates Buffett with a tremendous understanding of businesses, economy, stocks, an intuitive astuteness acquired with a lot of work, and also values. In comparison to most of the ultra-rich, his is a modest lifestyle - staying in a house in Omaha he acquired long back. However, Buffett is regarded as a person who underestimated and missed the technology revolution. While he has admitted to not knowing technology deeply, in a talk he explained how innovation changes living standards but companies spearheading it are not necessarily resilient in the long term from a market perspective (good examples are automotive, power).

    I liked the concept of a ‘inner scorecard’ for which he credits his dad. He compliments his family as being the best possible, though his first wife Susie started living separately in San Francisco later. A lot of the information around his early years and personal life was something I did know about. Making money was always on his mind and he started off with selling chewing gum, coke, newspapers and did odd jobs to have $1000 savings by the age of 14. His professional career, his keen interest in stocks and investments in Berkshire Hathway are all discussed in detail. Susie hoped that he would slow down and give more time to family, but that did not happen, ultimately taking a toll. Buffet got close to Katharine Graham, and later got into a relationship with Astrid, who he married when he was 76 (2 years after Susie passed away). Buffet’s views on values, equality, and other social causes make for inspiring reading. When a controversy erupted in the business dealings of Salomon, Buffet said:
    "Lose money for the firm and I will be understanding. Lose a shred of reputation for the firm, and I will be ruthless."


    His introduction to Bill Gates started a long association. The paragraph where they discuss what was the most important attribute for success is striking – they both agreed it is ‘focus’. Gates educated the Buffet Group on the impact technology would have on businesses & lives (eg: he predicted the decline of Kodak well before it was apparent to most). Buffet became keenly interested in population control, reducing risk of nuclear weapons & other social causes. He was moved by the logic of Garrett Hardin who in an article "The tragedy of the commons", outlined people's lack of ownership in common goods - air, water etc, though Buffett disagreed that authoritarian measures were called for. Over time, people started looking to him for life advice. He suggested that we should consider that we have a quota of 20 punches in life, where each significant investment decision uses one punch. Buffett has committed a lot of his money to the Gates Foundation and advised billionaires to contribute 50% or more of their wealth for social causes.

    This is an extremely detailed biography and helped me understand Buffett’s approach to life and business. The amount of detail seems excessive at times (after all this is a book of 800+ pages), and yet I found it very readable and made good progress. There are aspects of his personal life which are poorly explained – especially his not considering his son Peter’s adopted daughters Nicole & Erica as his grandchildren. His failings in not devoting time to Susie & family find sketchy and neutral mention.

    Buffet obviously is a towering figure and a study of his life as in this book is inspiring. It is no wonder that many seek his insights, including students whom he loves to talk to. The lovely quote below on the legacy he would like to leave, and what he believes all of us should as well.


    "If you get to my age in life and nobody thinks well of you, I don't care how big your bank account is, your life is a disaster. That's the ultimate test of how you have lived your life."


    My rating: 4.25 / 5.

  • Socraticgadfly

    No, this is NOT "THE book" ...

    Want a real bio of Warren Buffett? You'll have to keep waiting, because this book ain't it.

    This baby's got some major boo-boos in just the first 50 pages. (But there's more later!) Add in overwriting, poor writing, and apparently economic slants or ax-grinding and ugg ....

    First, the early errors:

    1. She claims Hoover was Coolidge's VP. Nope, twas Charles Curtis.

    2. She claims some other speech, not "Cross of Gold," was William Jennings Bryan's most famous. Not even close.

    3. A possible whopper. On page 17, she describes the "notoriously fumble fingered Buffett" trying to "get up" a PowerPoint slide as if it were an actual slide... Dunno if she believes that, but it halfway sounds that way.

    And, as I said, that's just in the first FIFTY pages.

    Biggest of the later errors?

    Page 639, Schroeder says the Taoiseach is "head of state" of Ireland.

    NOPE. Try "head of government," not "head of state." And, in a parliamentary government, that's a big difference.

    She also appears to take some Dust Bowl yarns as truth.

    ===

    Economic ax-grinding? Claiming that going off the gold standard, specifically, Great Britain in 1930, is just an "excuse to write bad checks."

    So, Ms. Goldbug, you still carry non-gold-backed Federal Reserve Notes in your wallet? Vote for Ron Paul? Etc., etc.

    Also speaking of writing back checks, in the midst of this economic meltdown, you didn't "fluff" any CDOs, CDSs, etc. at Morgan Stanley, did you? Afraid of having any bonuses capped by the "bad check writing" U.S. Govt?

    She later repeats the oft-retold conservative myth, or lie, that the New Deal "didn't work." Wrong. Especially before FDR got balanced-budget cold feet, he cut unemployment in half during his first term.

    ===

    Over-writing?

    When we have a footnote, a DUH footnote, telling us banks were more vulnerable to robberies during the Depression because they didn't have electronic security systems, you know this baby has been over-written by at least 200 pages.

    Another anal footnote? Footnoting a source for Buffett not ice-skating well as a kid because he had weak ankles. Anal.

    You could surely whack half or more of the 100 pages of footnotes, leaving 150 pages out of more than 800 to easily be cut.

    It's overwritten in another way.

    Schroeder never claims she's trying to imitate the personality of Buffett in her writing style, as defenders of her claim here. Therefore, it's obvious she just doesn't know how to write a biography, or a hagiography.

    It's like Gertrude Stein said about Oakland, ultimately. "There's no there there" in this book, other than the Chinese water torture of nearly 900 pages of draggy writing, interspersed with defensiveness of Saint Warren of Omaha.

    ===

    And, that's the primary part of the "more" from the title of my review.

    This is NOT a neutral biography. Interesting that Schroeder doesn't tout it as the "authorized" biography, because that's exactly what it is. So, it's not going to be neutral, despite Warren's charge to her to write the worse whenever she hears two accounts of a story. Warren knows she's already sold herself by this point, so he doesn't have to worry.

    I might originally have rated this baby at two stars, but it appears Buffett-heads are little short of Obamiacs, so this baby has to get a one-stsr rating to compensate.

    ===

    I will say that, ***not having read ANY Buffett bio before,*** I learned some things about him (which I surely could have learned from another bio).

    His almost-intuitive "friends" approach to buying nearly cost him his a** with Salomon. He only survived that because of a reputation he'd already had. But, in her "dispassionate" or mind-numbing/quasi-hagiographic style, Schroeder never takes him to the woodshed for the dumbest "friends" decision this side of George W. Bush looking into Vlad the Impaler Putin's eyes and not seeing John McCain there.

  • Espen

    To succeed in business, be patient, look for value, be honest, and have cash in hand. And don't think about anything else. In fact, be an unrepentent monomaniac. Warren Buffett has become the worlds richest man by making investments that he gets derided for at 10-year intervals, then, when the bubble bursts, he is a saint again.... Buffett is extremely good at making money - and has a rather impressive idea about what to do with it (keep investing, give it all away to someone who is good at giving away money, such as Bill Gates.)

    The biography is an impressive work in itself. 838 densely written pages about a man whose personal life has been rather unspectacular (hamburgers and Cherry Coke, poring over stock lists and annual reports). Schroeder is a business writer and financial analyst, so she has real knowledge about deals and can write with authority on complicated cases such as Salomon Brothers. I would have loved to see her write a biography on Bill Gates with the same level of business detail, though we will probably have to wait another decade or so for that to happen.

    Recommended as a backgrounder on the financial crisis as well - it is up to date as of April 2008, which is rather impressive in itself.

  • Jess

    Let no one ever accuse Alice Schroeder of being anything less than thorough. She has brought new meaning to the phrase "exhaustively researched."

    I first got really interested in finance a couple years ago when I decided to pay off my student loans at an accelerated rate (and now they're all gone, thanks in part to the research I did on effectively managing personal finances). Anyway, at that time well-meaning people (including my father's financial advisor) recommended I read The Total Money Makeover by Dave Ramsey. Only by that point, I'd already learned about debt snowballs and the Ramsey method, and it didn't really have much to offer me. I can see how it would be useful for someone with little willpower and out-of-control spending. But that wasn't me. It was pretty useless advice actually, and I benefitted a lot more from various blogs and less-hyped financial gurus.

    Because the one thing that seemed to be missing from the philosophies of a lot of said gurus was the idea of living simply. I don't want to build wealth so I can spend it on a $40k car. I don't even want to own multiple homes (that's what a tent and a camp stove are for). I want to live a good life well.

    Enter Warren Buffett, famous for still living in the same $31,500 house he bought sixty years ago. He drives cheap cars, wears cheap clothes, and insists that his children work for their money (more on that in a minute). And yet he's got more money than God. What a fascinating person.

    So I decided to read The Snowball first to learn about this very interesting and influential person and to see if I could glean some wisdom for my own financial journey forward. The result was that I learned more than I ever wanted to know about Warren Buffett and was introduced to a few really smart financial ideas that never would have occurred to me before. I'll start with the latter.

    Since he was a kid working his paper route, Buffett learned to treat every dollar like it was ten dollars. Which is genius, right? Because if you invest that one dollar, it really will end up being ten dollars some day in the future. So why not pretend like it is currently its future worth? That certainly makes one pause before making any sort of purchase, from a latte to a house. You have to really want something if it's worth ten times more to you than its sticker price. I like this idea so much I started using it immediately.

    Starting early was another thing Buffett hit out of the park. I didn't really "start" getting my financial house in order until I was about twenty-seven--before then I was just kind of flailing. But Buffett had that shit dialed in since he was twelve, and the result was that he was a millionaire by his early thirties. And as we all know, once you have money it's relatively easy to make more of it. So by Buffett's standards, I'm lagging way behind. And while I wish I had really flexed by financial muscles earlier on, at least I started strong when I did, and I'm now on track. Not to be a millionaire, mind you, but to have enough fuck-you money to not have to work a job I'm unhappy with in ten years.

    But let's talk about Buffett the man. He kind of has this reputation for being a totally outlandish character, which I don't think is fair. In fact, now that Alice Schroeder has taken me through his thought process in minute, painful detail over the course of his entire life (have I mentioned this book is long?), I actually find him to be pretty rational and understandable.

    Buffett is a lifelong proponent of human rights. He very wisely and logically understands that he won "the ovarian lottery," and that he could very easily have ended up a Bengali factory worker. Instead he was lucky enough to be born in the literal Land of Opportunity, and he took that opportunity and used it to make billions. I find it perfectly understandable that he therefore feels a strong obligation to the poor and unlucky of the world. He is effective and compassionate in his philanthropy, and he is ruthless when it comes to tax reform not favoring the rich. I firmly believe the world would be a better place if more billionaires and millionaires thought like Warren Buffett. If he believes in a humanitarian cause, you should probably give it a chance (I'm looking at you, anti-choice politicians).

    He also knows himself: what makes him happy, who he cares for. And he doesn't waste any time on anything that doesn't fall into those categories. So if Buffett loves you, you can expect for him to never, EVER let you down. Likewise, he doesn't really get out of his comfort zone where food or new experiences are concerned. "If a three-year-old won't eat it, I won't eat it." And while this sounds like a miserable way to go through life if you enjoy varied and interesting tastes, you have to admire his commitment. Man knows what he likes! Why deviate?

    I was pretty tired of the details of all of his business dealings by the end, though I completely understand why such a thorough and detailed biography is called for. I'm sure there are Buffett wannabes out there who pored over this thing like it was holy writ. But I'm not one. A lot of it could have been condensed for me and I would've walked away with the same impression.

    Lastly, I'll just say that the author's tone trended almost toward fawning adoration. But it's easy to see why! He literally is a larger-than-life figure whose mistakes were made with the best impressions and whose successes overshadowed even his minor faults. But if you're not one for hero-worship, it might be best to skip this really incredible work of biographic integrity.

  • Mike W

    This is a good biography of Warren Buffett, but it could have been better. While it depicted his personal life and his character well, it could have done a better job with his investment philosophy. Roger Lowenstein's earlier biography was better, in this regard.

    Buffett is a complex character, as Schroeder portrays him. He inveighs against privilege, inherited wealth and nepotism, but gives his kids $1 million a year as birthday gifts and appoints them as directors of his company, Berkshire Hathaway. He derides Wall Street investment bankers for earning massive fees while contributing little or nothing to society, and then invests heavily in major investment banks, first in Solomon Brothers and then in Goldman Sachs--each mired in scandal. He protests loudly and often about the inequality of wealth in the US, but has himself been one of the greatest contributors to that inequality, through his own massive accumulation of wealth and his reluctance to give to charity in his own lifetime. And while he preaches "social justice" he practices hard-nosed capitalism, laying off workers and breaking strikes to add to his already enormous profits. Moreover, while he pushes for higher taxes on the wealthy, he takes every legal measure to minimize his own taxes.

    So Buffett is open to charges of hypocrisy, as Schroeder makes clear. Hers is no work of hagiography. But he also deserves much of the praise he gets, as an honest and highly capable businessman who takes his fiduciary responsibilities seriously. Through shrewd investments in companies like See's Candies, GEICO, Coca Cola and Gillette, he built enormous wealth for himself and his shareholders. And he did so honestly and conservatively, not exploiting inside information like Bernie Madoff or George Soros, nor through "greenmail" and risky levereged bets like Michael Milken and his acolytes.

    This biography depicts Buffet as a very limited man. He cares little for art, philosophy or literature. He would rather ponder the balance sheet of General Electric than the beauty of the ocean. But he is the greatest in the world in his own limited sphere.

    In sum, this is a good biography, but it's too long and should do more to explain Buffett's investing ideas. For example, when describing his investment in Coca Cola, Schroeder mentions Coke's price, but not its P/E ratio, nor does she explain sufficiently why he thought that price was attractive. In 900 pages, one would expect more.

  • Saurabh Hooda

    The snowball gives a sneak preview look into the life of the greatest investor in Universe (Yes, he can beat Mars folks too). The biography tells his nature, his characteristics, his habits and so many other things about him. If you want to read this book to get some tips to become billionaire, or some stock tips, then this might not be the right book. The snowball doesn't give any tips or tricks; it just presents the incidents in Warren's life and how he reacted to them. Everything is left for your interpretation so you will get lots of good points for introspection.
    Book presents Warren's thought process by introducing concept like Inner scorecard, bathtub memory, value of reputation. Buffett threw newspapers in his neighborhood as a child, handicapped in race course, had stage fright but he conquered all odds by sheer perseverance and his grit. Anyone would have recommended a book on Warren Buffett so am not doing you a favor by recommending this. Go and grab your copy. And read it twice. Enjoy reading!!

  • Nicholas George

    This probably is a very good book -- the author is a superb writer -- but it didn't overcome my natural aversion to lengthy, overly detailed biographies such as this. Buffett is, of course, a fascinating subject, the richest man in the world but one who is not greedy, does not wallow in conspicuous consumerism, and is inherently modest. Schroeder leads us through every phase of his life, and it is a remarkable one. But I found myself skimming over much of the minutiae and fixating on some of the more compelling moments (and there are many, not just in his financial exploits but also his relationship with his wife Susie and his children). Overall, however, this was about 400 pages too much for me.

  • JJ Khodadadi

    زندگی نامه وارن بافت که برای علاقمندان به بازارهای مالی میتونه جالب باشه

  • Todd N

    Warren Buffett skipped a grade in school, is lacking in domestic skills, is uncomfortable in social situations, hates getting advice, shoplifted a lot as a teenager, and wears the same worn out clothes over and over. Little did I know that I was sitting on a gold mine all these years.

    But he's the one with $50B dollars, and I'm an Internet thousandaire. So there must be differences that I'm not taking into account.

    This is a long-ass book, by the way. I read it on my Kindle, and somewhere around chapter 51 I started to think to myself, "just how long is this book?" A note for those considering the Kindle edition -- there are a bunch of interesting notes at the end but no easy way to jump back and forth. It is completely impractical to read the notes while reading the main text.

    The book is a bit slow to get started, but once it gets going it becomes very interesting. I don't like it when biographies start two generations before the subject of the biography. It's generally pretty boring, and I get confused by all the names and the two different families. I suppose it provides necessary context, but there must be an easier way to get that information out of the way -- maybe in an outline form.

    The titular snowball is a metaphor for the fortune that Mr. Buffett amasses throughout his life. And you get to read about the very first snowflakes from selling sticks of gum door to door at the age of (I think) 6 or so.

    About 1/3 the way through the book it really picks up speed. I found the stories of the first few major investments that he made fascinating. And the section on Salomon was so gripping I couldn't put it down. I'm not really someone who is naturally interested in business, so it's a testament to the great writing and the empathy I developed for Mr. Buffett.

    Throughout the book I was fascinated with Mr. Buffett's personality and actions, though I didn't know much more about him than that he is Bill Gates's friend. I don't think there are many other people I would want to read about for 900+ pages (including Mr. Gates). He's such an interesting bundle of contradictions, id, and insecurities. But when he it comes to approaching business he there is a purity to his rational mind that is inspiring, even a little scary. The few missteps that he makes in business are when emotion leaks between the compartments in his brain.

    I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in reading about people who perform at the pinnacle of their field. It reminded me a lot of an extended chapter from Lives of the Great Composers with music replaced by business.

  • Daniel Clausen

    Like the man himself, the book can often be dry, riskless, and homespun. The aesthetic quality reflects the subject-matter of the book. And that is one of the points of this great man's life: high quality success is rarely very flashy. It can be as simple as a man sitting in a room reading newspapers and almanacs for hours on end, obsessed with finding bargains, inner score cards, and margins of safety. Success, often, is a person marrying wisely and staying married despite the hardships. Success is as simple as finding a good invest or two and holding onto it.

    I take comfort from knowing that Warren would have been right at home with someone like my mother. She spent many thankless hours clipping coupons, buying used goods, and diving in dumpsters just to help our family save money. She also started a "junk" business where she would advertise in the local paper to buy people's junk. She would buy it cheap and then turn around and sell it in a flea market for a profit.

    How different is my mom's old business from Warren's? Well, what my mom might called "junk", Warren would likely call discarded "cigarette butts." Where Buffett "Buffetted" distressed people into selling cheap, my mom "mommed" her way into getting people who were moving to either sell cheap or even give away their unwanted things.

    You'll learn a lot about investing in this book. You'll learn what it means to be a person of strong core values (an inner moral compass). You'll learn the value of leading a life that fits what you do best.

    But you'll also learn some ugly lessons. Even the wisest among us make mistakes. Tragedy strikes us all. Time is undefeated.

    And the worst lesson of all...it's almost impossible to get good (usually introverted) people to run for public office.

  • Jason

    Fascinating man with an intriguing story to tell.

    Biographies are not something I read a lot of, and when I do I am not sure exactly how to review them - we will just call this a disclaimer.

    Solidly written and well balanced between the personal and the more over-arching, this was a really good read. I also appreciate the fact that this is not a glowing portrayal from start to finish, it seems like a fair portrayal, not overly filtered nor overtly striving for the negative. Mr. Buffett is simply a man, yes, a man with a fairly brilliant mind, but one with limits. That great mind is focused and while it can be said to be brilliant at certain things - mostly analytical and business oriented - this is also a man/mind that has it's weaknesses and faults - I think he would readily admit that in some areas he is in fact deficient. He is also an individual, often solitary man, but also a man of conviction and determination. I love getting a glimpse inside who Warren Buffett is and what he has done, but I know that I can not become a Warren Buffett, my mind simply works very differently than his. I can take certain lessons from him however, one of which is that we can all accomplish great things if we are determined to do so and we play to our own strengths. Another lesson is that we can all try to be morally decent people no matter what path our lives may take. I guess the take away might be that while money can be important, it can make a difference, it is also not the most important thing, not even for Mr. Warren Buffett.

  • Arash

    راضی نبودم

  • Henrik Haapala

    Great biography!

    ”Cash combined with courage in a crisis is priceless.” /WB p.698

    “I packed my little snowball very early, and if I had packed it ten years later, it would have been way different than were it stands on the hill right now. So I recommend to students that if you start out a little ahead of the game - it doesn’t have to be a lot, but it’s so much better than starting out behind the game. And credit cards really get you behind the game.” p. 702

    “The purpose of life is to be loved by as many people as possible among those you want to have live you.” p.703

    • Reading: “This bookcase also held a series of small biographies, many of them on business leaders. Since a young age Warren had studied the lives of men like Jay Cooke, Daniel Drew, Jim Fisk, Cornelius Vanderbilt, Jay Gould, John D. Rockefeller, and Andrew Carnegie. Some of these books he read and reread. One of them was special - not a biography but a paperback written by former salesman Dale Carnegie, enticingly titled How to Win Friends and Influence People. He had discovered it at age eight or nine.” p.90
    • Graham: “From Graham’s class, Warren took away three main principles:
    1. A stock is the right to own a little piece of a business. A stock is worth a certain fraction of what you would be willing to pay for the whole business.
    2. Use a margin of safety. Investing is built on estimates and uncertainty. A wide margin of safety ensures that the effects of good decisions are not wiped out by errors. The way to advance, above all, is by not retreating.
    3. Mr. Market is your servant, not your master. Graham postulated a moody character called Mr. Market, who offers to buy and sell stocks every day, often at prices that don’t make sense. Mr. Market’s moods should not influence your view of a price. However, from time to time he does offer the chance to buy low and sell high.” p. 133
    • “Of these points, the margin of safety was most important. A stock might be the right to own a piece of a business, and the intrinsic value of the stock was something you could estimate, but with a margin of safety, you could sleep at night.” p. 133
    • Warren Buffett bought his first stocks at eleven years old in 1942 in Cities Service Prefered.
    • “Warren learned three lessons and would call this episode one of the most important in his life. One lesson was not to overly fixate in what he had paid for a stock. The second was not to rush unthinkingly to grab a small profit. He learned these two lessons by brooding over the $492 he would have made had he been more patient. It had taken five years of work, since he was six years old, to save the $120 to buy this stock. Based on how much he currently made from selling golf balls or peddling popcorn and peanuts at the ballpark, he realized that it could take years to earn back the profit he had “lost”. He would never, never, never forget this mistake.
    And there was a third lesson, which was about investing other people’s money. If he made a mistake, it might get somebody upset at him. So he didn’t want to have responsibility for anyone else’s money unless he was sure he could succeed.”
    • Another influential book: “One thousand ways to make $1000”.
    • About Dale Carnegie’s book: “it changed my life”
    • Have an inner scorecard; you have 20 unique opportunities during your lifetime, be ready for them. Big opportunities are rare.
    • Invest long term in business, preferably with a moat, that will be around for 20 years.
    • Become a learning machine, be humble and ask questions and find mentors.
    • Think like an entrepreneur and investor from early on and build that snowball whether it is money, relationships, health or happiness.
    Be a truth seeker.

  • Arun Pandiyan

    Lessons from The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life

    1. Chase learning by active participation.

    If you are lucky to find your niche or domain at an early age, the only way you are going to excel in it is through active participation. Writing few pages a day will help you more than reading about how to be a good writer. Investing actively will help you learn more about the market than waiting for a good time to start. Learning by active participation is a tool to enrich your capabilities.

    2. Consult your heroes.

    We don't have to emulate our heroes, but we should always consult them. When you have someone to look up to, you can always consult them and learn how best to utilize their methods and tools to solve your own problems. Warren Buffett looked up to Benjamin Graham, who once rejected Buffet when he applied for a job. Still, Buffet consulted with Graham throughout his journey.

    3. Build systems to have a good life.

    Buffet created a system of numericals and statistics from his childhood to figure out the best ways to make right decisions. Warren thought about odds and probabilities in everything he saw around him. He borrowed the system of “never criticize” from Dale Carnegie and actively encouraged the rule: “Praise by name, criticize by category”.

    4. Snowflakes are important for snowball

    Buffet followed the time value of money as a rule to watch out his expenditure. His system was “a dollar not spent is a dollar saved. A dollar saved today is worth ten dollars next year.”

    5. Stick with what works

    Buffet believed that we only need to make few important decisions to build a good life. He studied the fundamentals of investing and stuck with what worked. He had an “inner scorecard” where he knew what works the best for him and never had an entitlement the world should be impressed by his approach. “If all the emphasis is on what the world's going to think about you, you'll wind up with an outer scorecard.”

    6. Be a good researcher

    Warren had an impeccable ability to gather as many information as possible and analyse them coherently to arrive at a certain conclusion. The eclecticism was a product of his diverse reading.

    7. Be a contrarian when needed

    Warren recognized that herd mentality was a chief predictor of failure and his research ability helped him to be a contrarian whenever needed. When American Express went into legal troubles over a corporate scandal (Salad Oil Scandal, 1964), Buffet quickly gathered his men to conduct a market survey on the reputation of American Express. Today, Buffet holds 21% of American Express, a leading financial services corporation in the US.

    8. Volunteer for a cause and contribute

    Buffet actively contributed to the civil rights movement, and deployed some of his earnings into The Buffet Foundation to fund the state education in his locality.

    9. Have a margin of safety

    If a wire bridge with a signboard says 'maximum capacity 1000 tonnes', it is irrational to try to get across it using a vehicle carrying 998 tonnes. Buffet excelled in this understanding of giving oneself a room for error, because one doesn't always know everything.

    10. Embrace the circle of competence

    Moving away from the cigar butt approach that he learned from his mentor Ben Graham, Warren carved his principle of staying within his circle of competence during the tech boom of 1960s. Confidence is not a measure of accuracy and most of the times we are accurate in the things only we are competent enough to have an opinion on. Buffet knew more about chewing gum than technology when he bought seas candies.

    11. Don't try to do it alone

    Rome wasn't built in a day, but we must also know Rome wasn't built by one individual alone. A successful career requires partnerships, collaboration and counsel from others. Buffet contributed only $100 for his first partnership.

    12. Live frugally

    At the age of 26, Buffet declared “I rented a house at 5202 Underwood in Omaha for $175 a month. We would live on $12,000 a year.” Buffet was not only a simple man, but he had simple tastes. He did not own a yacht or helicopter or a premium car. Throughout his life he lived in a modest house in Omaha, with fixed annual income of $50,000 by the time he turned forty seven, even when he was worth $135 million and member of board for several companies.

    13. Never break the compounding

    The greatest success of Buffet came not from his skill, (he clocked a annual return of only 22%, much lesser as compared to the present day hedge fund managers) but from his adherence to compounding and his periodical reinvestment of dividends and fees into his holdings. Buffet acknowledged "Our favorite holding time of a company is forever”. Starting earlier in life and understanding the magical power of compounding made him a prolific investor. He made friends with the time and considered patience as a virtue for the outcomes it yielded.

    14. Document

    “..he fell back on the role that suited him best: the teacher, the preacher. As long as he had his brains and his reputation, people would listen to him.

    In the winter of 1978, Buffet turned with renewed intensity to writing his annual letters. He started drafting lessons on how managements' performance should be measured, why short-term earnings are a poor criterion for investment decisions, a dissertation on insurance.”

    15. Acknowledge your ovarian lottery

    As we grow up and climb the ladder of success in life, we tend to cocoon ourselves into a belief that we did it all by ourselves. Our definition of success gets so individualized that we overlook the several other factors that aided our success. By the time Buffett joined the global rich list, he started floating his idea of the 'ovarian lottery' reiterating often that his success was a byproduct of his time, place of birth, and other factors.

    16. But never let anyone dismiss you

    In the 1980s, the efficient market hypothesis (EMH) was proposed by Ivy League academicians, claiming that in the long run, no one can beat the market, and anyone who does that is an outlier or is lucky. When Buffett was invited to give comments on this hypothesis at Columbia in 1984, he articulated a solid defense against the hypothesis, preparing for weeks. When the opposite party proclaimed that if a coin is tossed several times, and few of them flipped heads over and over, the event is random. Buffett dismantled the argument stating, that the row of heads would not be random if all the successful coin flippers came from the same town. For example, if all the successful coin flippers who kept flipping heads came from the tiny village, something specific that they were doing must be making those coin flip heads. He pulled off the charts of various money managers with their track records. Their portfolio was not similar, and everyone was successfully flipping heads for more than twenty years. Such a concentration proved statistically that their success is not random luck.

    17. Always be prepared for the crisis

    Buffett believed that having a cushion is always a good idea because when you crash land, you'll always be saved. He wrote, "You never want to be in a position where tomorrow morning, you have to depend on the kindness of strangers. You just cannot be sure of anything. You have to think about the things that have never happened before. You always want to have plenty of money around." When the 2008 financial crisis bloomed, Buffett was already holding a huge pile of cash. He employed his tactics of acquiring stakes in business at a discounted price by simply following the rule of being fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful.

    18. Be wary of the shoe button complex

    The Shoe Button Complex is a mental model coined by Charlie Munger and Warren Buffett and used to describe when an individual’s success in one area leads them to believe they know everything there is to know about all other areas. Buffett was born in 1930, and he lived through the Second World War, the opening up of the economy, and technological and military advances, from stream engines to microchips, and audio cassettes getting replaced with iPods. Yet, his success in investing or business never made him believe that he knew it all. He often accepted his ignorance of computers, technology, and gadgets.

    19. Be sticky like a snowball

    "I packed my snowball very early, and if I had packed it ten years later, it would have been way different than where it stands on the hill right now. The snowball just happens if you're in the right kind of snow, and that's what happened to me. I don't just mean compounding money either. It's in terms of understanding the world and what kind of friends you accumulate. You get to select over time, and you've got to be the kind of person that the snow wants to attach itself to. You've got to be your own wet snow, in effect. You'd better be picking up snow as you go along because you are not going to be getting back to the top of the hill again. That's the way life works.

  • Jeff

    A great look at the richest man in the world (or second depending on how Bill Gates' stocks did today.)

    I once wrote a letter to Warren Buffet asking him to come speak to the Buckhead Church staff. A few days later, I received an email from him politely declining. I was amazed he took the time to even respond. Here are some insights from one of the smartest people around:

    Warren Buffett to his biographer: "Whenever my version is different from somebody else's, use the less flattering version."

    When asked what factor was the most important in getting to where they had gotten in life, both Warren Buffett and Bill Gates said one word: Focus. By focus, they meant intense discipline and a passionate perfectionism.

    "When you get to my age, you'll really measure your success in life by how many of the people you want to have love you actually do love you."

    "It's very irritating if you have a lot of money. You'd like to think you could write a check: I'll buy a million dollars worth of love. But it doesn't work that way. The more you give love away, the more you get.

    "If you have a problem with an employee in your firm, that's his problem. If you've got a problem with an employee in your firm and you fail to do something about it, that's your problem."

    "Lose money for the firm and I will be understanding. Lose a shred of reputation for the firm and I will be ruthless." "We are going to do 'first-class business in a first-class way.'

    He wanted to run things by what he called the front-page test: "I want employees to ask themselves whether they are willing to have any contemplated act appear the next day on the front page of their local paper to be read by their spouses, children and friends, with the reporting done by an informed and critical reporter."

    "Very few people should be active investors. Buy a low-cost index fund, and buy it over time.


    "People don't want criticism. They want honest and sincere appreciation. Don't criticize, condemn or complain."

    Praise by name, criticize by category.

  • Sarah

    An extremely thorough biography (I had to check out the audiobook twice) plus mini biographies of every person in his inner circle. Some questionable details about his personal life (e.g., he paid his wife and daughter to weigh only 118 pounds). Essentially he had two wives at the same time (Susie and Astrid). Love to learn more about GEICO, The Washington Post Company, and Berkshire Hathaway. High praise for the Gates Foundation. Truly wild that Warren still lives in the same $30,000 home in Omaha. The man loves Coca Cola and hamburgers. He is a medical miracle.

    I like what Bob Woodward said about Katherine Graham: “Her skill was to raise the bar, gently but relentlessly.”

  • Jenny Baker

    3.5 stars

  • Emma K

    Part 1
    [1] The less flattering version
    “Balzac said that behind every great fortune lies a crime. That’s not true at Berkshire.”
    “ Over time our relationship has turned friendly.”
    This part illustrates how Buffett invited the author to write this biography for him. Their friendship developed from .
    [2] Sun Valley
    P2-P4
    “His mood was buoyant; he had been anticipating this trip for weeks.”
    The Buffetts are on a plane.

    P5-P6 “But if that was so, why had nobody else been able to replicate it?”
    It talked how Buffet got arrived and caught the attention of the press. His public images is a single man and seemingly genuine. However, he lives a complicated life.
    I like the way the author makes comparison between Buffett’s simplicity and complexity.
    “Notebook”
    “Timed to the second, organized to the hilt, his schedule was laid out hour by hour, day by day.”
    It then illustrated Allen&Co’s president’s secret weapon: “elephant bumping” and “very very attractive babysitters” and how Buffet behaved on this social event.

    P7-P8 The new
    The new moguls got altogether.
    “A new group of recently minted technology executives, filled with an unusual swagger, introduced themselves to people who had never heard of them a year before.”
    It is said that Buffett was as a closing speaker of the year.
    It talked about the technology revolutionary, and its influence on business investors.
    “This was not the first time that world-changing new technologies had come along and shaken up the stock market. Business history was replete with new technologies - railroads, telegraph, telephone, automobiles, airplanes, televisions; all revolutionary ways to connect things faster - but how many had made investors rich? He was about to explain.”

    P9-P11 “There are always losers”
    “It’s little things like that that history turns on.”
    Buffet is going to give a speech on the podium.
    The CEO of Coco Cola is under the stage, along with Bill Gates.
    Buffet first told a story about how he was several rejected by the former president of Coco Cola.
    ### “Too dark to read, and too early to go to sleep.”
    “There is only two questions. One is how much you’re going to get back, and the other is when.”
    “There were only three ways the stock market could keep rising at ten percent or more a year” One, interest rates; Second, the investor’s share; third, economy grows.
    And he called cash “the birds in hand”. He compared “interest rates” in finance as to the gravity in physical world.
    “Autos had an enormous impact on America, but in the opposite direction on investors.”
    He presented the unchangeable Dow Jones index over dozens of years, and the declining population of U.S. horse. He said should be shorting horse.
    ### “Too dark to read, and too early to go to sleep.”
    “Their companies might be losing money, but in their hearts beat a conviction that they were winners’

    P12-P14 “Praise by name, criticize by category.”
    “ You can get in way more trouble with a good idea than a bad idea, because you forget that the good idea has limit.”
    * Buffett speaking at the podium and sent out several experienced laws:
    * Stocks earn more than bond.
    * Buffett made his first prediction in thirty years, while peoples hold the belief that he missed the tech boat.


    [3] Creatures of Habit

    P14 - P17
    It really amuses me when Munger is introduced. What amuses me is not that he and Buffett are two different type, which is not a big surprise for me. What amuses me is the criteria that the writer used to divided them two. 1. pleasing people 2. need respect only.
    And it is also funny, how their attitude towards taking a risk:
    * Buffett:
    * “He believed in what he called the Circle of Competence, drew a line around himself, and stayed within the three subjects on which he would be recognized as absolutely expert: money, business, and his own life.”
    * How to build a self-intoxication
    * It is amazing that how chatty Buffett is, and how he emerged himself in language and opinions.
    And the same time, the narrative way the author is using is really not worth appreciating. It is so un organized, or so un-selective. This thing like a mixture of essay and journal
    This part also pictures Munger as an old-fashion man of kind of idiosyncrasy. He and Buffett are both called the creature of habit. This part introduced Munger’s typical day. Work, play, family.
    No surprise. He likes reading. No surprise, He has a fixed schedule. No surprise, he used the same old suitcase inherited from his father.

    * P16 - P17
    * “He kept these relationships separate, as he kept many of his relationships separate.”
    * This part introduced the daily rituals of Buffett, this mega-billionaire.
    * There are two interesting facts: He answered his phone by himself, not by his secretary. And he has dinner with a woman who is not his wife. This woman, Astrid, and his wife are friends.
    * He devoted about 12 hours a week to his nightly bridge game on the Internet.
    * Sounds like his lifestyle is pretty much physical sedentary and intellectual active.

    * P17 Ch4
    * P17-P19
    * This part introduced a failure that Buffett experienced “on the eve of the millennium”. Buffett got derided by Barron’s, but he did not fight back. This story brought us to touch his inner-scorecard. He announced that he inherited this from his father, a man who really did not think about how other people think about him. Buffett emphasized the importance of parenting on teaching children which one is of more importance: the inner scorecard, or the outer scorecard.
    * The question Buffett asked in this part touched the “being and appearance” questions. “If the world couldn’t see your results, would you rather be through of as the world’s greatest investor but in reality have the word’s worst record? Or be though of as the world’s worst investor when you were actually the best?”
    * I totally prefer to be authentic to ourselves: focus on inner scorecard gives your power. If you focus on outer scorecard, you will eventually get lost, or you will achieved the things that you do not treasure.

    # Ch6
    P24 - P28
    This part told us how the family of Buffett, when he was a child, approached the more than comfortable middle-class in the shadow of the depression.
    Howard, Buffett’s father, is like a self-made business man, experiencing unemployment period and startup his own business, and make success from a scratch.
    Leila, Buffett’s mother, takes care of the family, house work, and parenting children. An interesting comparison is that Leila behaved different when she faced the neighbor and her husband from when she treated and lashed her children. It is called “the damage to their souls”.
    Anyway, Buffett still were raised wholesome on the whole. He had his unique favorite things, like stopwatch and bathtub-marvels game.
    One trait shows in this part is that how strong-willed his father and mother both are. One strived in the business, the other provided him a good support, spiritually and practically. And Buffett shows the similar level of resilience through his eccentric childhood hobby.
    I wonder whether his mother’s harsh lash made Buffett never mention her innerscored card, and gave all the credit to his father.

    Ch7
    “He had learned a lesson: It might seem easier to go through life as the echo - but only until the other guy plays a wrong note.”
    It tells the story of Buffett’s childhood.
    His tactful, intelligent and idiosyncratic characteristic.
    His fond of numbers and computation, crime and identification, books and ping-pong, music and cornet.
    His relationship with two friends who are not very friend. His relationship with two other smart siblings.
    His unlike of his mother’s outer scorecard.
    Most of the time, he seems physically retiring and behave in a more collaborative way.
    At the end of this part, his big moment comes. In a concert, the cornet player who played previous to him made a mistake, All of a sudden, he lost the guide and clues, whether to follow or change the situation? (It is like to be a follower or a leader?) (his inner scorecard is struggling with being tactful and being rebellion)

    The author illustrated so many details without thoughtful organized. It is because she was a former CPA? Or is it because she shared the same fondness with Buffett on minutiae?

    Ch8
    This is a very essential chapter.
    It illustrated the first investment Warren had made and the three lessons he learned from it: 1. Don’t overly fixate the paid stock; 2. Don’t rush unthinkingly. 3. don’t take responsibility for other people.
    前两条都有点曾国藩:过往不恋,未来不迎 的意思。不过第三条相当美式。
    This part also told, how the big figure in wall street enlighten Warren’s life and along with his desire for money, which means independence to him.
    Three:
    Independence / Attention / Lure
    Ch9
    1. interesting stories about how his grandfather slaved him and taught Buffett Erne’s philosophy of business, including his canny opinion towards socialism.
    2. How Buffett and his peers develop relationship with girls. They are testing water to make better.
    3. The unhappy experience of moving to Washington D.C., Buffett’s schooling behave was SHOCKING at that time. He showed his rebellion, escaped and headstrong . How adolescent Buffet treated being left behind and recovered from failure is here.
    On a very very very personal note:
    I donna why. I recognized that I’ve developed a personal relationship with this book. I like the stories in it. I love Buffett’s teenage experience around his moving, schooling and developing. All the daily life scene in this part makes my intrigued.

    # Ch10 Disruptive
    It really amuses me that Buffett is far way from a straight A student, he was so rebelling in this junior high. More disappoint is that even his rebellion cannot make him happy. “It was unpleasant. I was really rebelling.” He even became a school delinquent, or a crime, a thief at that time, and lied about his theft.
    # Ch 11
    OMG. This book goes more and more interesting. Nowadays, I cannot control myself but laugh out loud. I really love the group of Buffett and his adolescent friends’ experience with physical training and sex education. It is the preparation period for their adulthood. You can tell how they do experience and learn new knowledge for the next stage in their life. All this attempt is elementary and they did it in a scientific-and-fantastic-mixed way.
    # Ch12
    This part illustrates the social intelligent enlightenment of Buffett is from Dale Carnegie. Warren took it seriously, and test the rules in a very systematic way. “People around him did not know he was performing experiments on them in the silence of his own head.”
    His other experiments involves some business scams, such as pinball machine “money that works for its owner, as if it had a job of its own” “Our basic formula was to have our income in currency and our outgo in slugs” and prank with poor Kerlin to make him stripped, nude and watered-down.
    Warren was canny and a bit lack of empathy in this part.

    Ch15 Warren in Penn
    Warren Buffette hated his college, found himself unfunctional in social life there, still illiterate in how to handle women, indulged in his own business world. His intelligence, nonetheless, still shows off in Penn. His favorite class is Industry 101. In this chapter, I found how Warren choose his friends. It is passive. He liked Chunk, but can not hold this friendship. Warren was still too introvert and meek at that time. It amused me that Chunk’s affirmation of Warren: “an odd mix of immature kid and brilliant prodigy”.

    Ch15
    Warren learnt accounting in University of Nebraska, and changed his mind to received some schooling.

    Warren wanted to get into Harvard, but got rejected. Cause Harvard wants leaders.

    Harvard: “the man saw past his confidence as a prodigy in a single subject straight through to his self-consciousness, his shaky inner core” “I looked about sixteen and emotionally was about nine.”

    Columbia has two of his favorite teachers : Graham and Dodd. (two books : the intelligent investor & Security Analysis) Columbia taught a specialized craft and did not care about his emotional maturity. He applied in August. “after the deadline, and without an interview” he got accepted by Columbia.

    Ch16
    This chapter talks about Warren’s study life in Columbia, NYC.
    One main story is that he is eager to figure out GEICO, which is funded by his hero, Graham. He went directly to the CFO office, and hold a long conversation with Davidson.

    Ch17 Ben Graham - idol
    * This chapter is about a very interesting person, warren’s idol: Ben Graham.
    *1. I was first surprised by his intelligence and excel at all levels:
    *2. then his impersonally discipline in stock trading and in treating his star student (warren) (he turned down warren’s offer to work for him for free)
    * His 3 laws:
    * 1. A stock is the right to own a little piece of a business.
    * 2. Use a margin of safety. (which builds his self-reliance against the turbulence of market)
    * 3. Mr. Market is your servant, not your master.
    * 3. His personal life: Like his intelligent taste, his romantic taste is also radiant and touched everywhere.
    * Company A vs Company B: comparison
    * Class 1 [intrinsic value] vs Class 2:
    * Class 1 truth were absolute
    * Class 2 truth were by conviction
    * Mental independence
    * Mr. Moody’
    * What amuses me and surprised me is how much Warren felt connected to media: he went nuts for reading newspaper, he started junior business with journalism, he gets info. from annual report.

    Ch18 Get your future father-in-law done & “I was a mess”
    This chapter is about how Warren got married with Susan. He did not get her heart from the very beginning, and he had a very strong rival, but he showed enough patient and know who is the crucial one. He spent time on his future father-in-law then get things done.
    I really do not enjoy this part. I do not enjoy watching Warren does dating or any romantic things. He was not romantic. But one touchy point is that Susan seemed start to like him from the moment that she knows that he is not so confident, he is fragile inside. “All that confident chatter about stocks, the aura of a prodigy, the tiny twang of the ukulele, were wrapped around a fragile, needy core: a boy who was stumbling through his days in a shroud of desolation.”

    Ch19 Get married and still young
    Warren had his most important event in this chapter: he got married.
    Warren had an unpleasant time in Omaha, he wanna got back to NYC, and got a job offer there under the help of Ben Graham “It seemed to Warren that nearly everything he did in Omaha reinforced his sense of youth and inexperience. He was no longer a precocious boy who was acting like a man, but a young man - about to get married - who looked and sometimes acted like a boy.”
    I was envious of him that Susie is so smart and mind-reading, what a wife: “She began to understand the damage Leila Buffett’s rages had done to her son’s self-worth, and she started trying to repair it. She knew that the main thing he needed was to feel loved and never criticized.” Sometimes, you really want a guy like Susie in your life to complete you, heal you, or acts like a spirit animal you have yet chase to lead you in your life. But there is none, you have to stand up on your own, with your own, by your own.

    Ch20
    I do not enjoy this chapter. Reading this book becomes a chore to me. I read this book today in an almost half-day-dreaming half-reading mood.
    Warren returned to NYC, to his hero Ben Graham.
    Howard got done in his political life.
    Sussie took care of Warren, she is like Warren’s mother.
    我并没能喜欢他们的爱情,他们的婚姻;他们的一切都跟我不是一个世界的。

    Ch21
    Ch21 He turned the offer down.
    Warren got back to NYC. And he got so successful at his age. The Buffett got truly rich. It is surprising that Warren showed his independence (which he was longing for a while) in this chapter. He controlled the budget for home. After getting truly rich, he made his own decision, even when he was filtered by offering a position as a general partner in Graham and Newman.
    Investor philosophy for Graham: “being an investor meant being an outsider”

    Ch23
    * Adult 101
    * I don’t know why from this chapter, this book becomes Adult 101 to me.
    * Munger’s mathematical way to make daily plan:
    * “Everybody should do this, be the client, and then work for other people, too, and sell yourself an hour a day.”

    * He and Warren’s philosophy all included independence.
    * He also focused on not undignified.

    Ch24
    * Warren started to act powerful, not vulnerable.
    * His success in investment brought him power, networking and partnership.
    * Soon after this 6 years (start-up period), he becomes a millionaire. And then the stock market begins to slide. It is time to Greedy vs. Fearful.

    Ch25 Ben Graham’s philosophy of cigar butts.
    Warren used this cigar butt technique, buy “below face-value” until liquidation.“which was to keep buying a stock as long as it continued to sell below book value. If the price rose for any reason, he could sell out at a profit. If it didn’t, and he ended up buying until he owned so much stock that he controlled the company, he could sell off - that is, liquidate - its assets at a profit.
    In this chapter, he fired the founder of Dempster, and was accused of being “abrupt and unethical”. “Buffett, at almost thirty-two, had not yet learned to fire people with empathy.”

    Ch26
    Warren's father died in this chapter.
    In this period, Susie really showed how strong mental she is. She is such a high-level woman, I am deeply touched by her philosophy of death and company. "It was a beautiful experience to be that physically and emotionally intimate with someone you loved, because I knew exactly what his needs were. You know when they need to turn their head, or you know when they need a little ice chip. You know. You feel it. I loved him very much. And he gave me that gift for myself of knowing, of having that experience, and realizing how I felt about it."
    Warren在父亲的去世面前表现出的不成熟与不悲伤:
    不敢面对,而用史无前例地加注自己的投资,
    不言不语,而却形销骨立。
    这里的笔法与《世说新语》好有一比。
    《世说新语.德行》王戎、和峤 同时遭大丧,俱以孝称。王鸡骨支床,和哭泣备礼。武帝谓刘仲雄曰:" 卿数省王、和不?闻和哀苦过礼,使人忧之。" 仲雄曰:" 和峤虽备礼,神气不损;王戎虽不备礼,而哀毁骨立。臣以和峤生孝,王戎死孝。陛下不应忧峤,而应忧戎。"
    The second theme of this chapter is : the difference of Warren and Munger's investment philosophy.

    Ch27 - Berkshire Hathaway
    * This chapter is the born of Berkshire Hathaway. Buffett’s takeover was out of his folly pulse. 但是这章里他超酷的😎,有木有啊~~~
    * And he lets his wife spend money out of limit now.

    Ch28
    It is so funny that I am reading the Buffett family lose weight in this chapter. Both Susie and Warren are so driven and self-disciplined. Keep eyes on their weight-in day, bet on a check to keep Warren motivated to lose weight.
    It also shows that their philosophy of upbringing, in a upper-middle-class family, raised unspoiled. Kids have to do chores to get their allowances.
    The pursuit of money is rooted in their personality. I like the way the author depicted how each family members react to the death of Howard and their beloved aunt.
    And the Vietnam war escalated at the end of this chapter.

    Ch29 How they dress in the textile business
    Warren’s lookbook at that time:
    “Buffett never varied his skinny striped ties and white shirt, though the shirt’s collar had grown tighter, and the jacket of the old gray suit he wore day after day bunched around his shoulders and gapped at the neckline.” A potential investor did not want to talk to him, “based purely on the way Warren dressed.”
    "Intensity is the price of excellence. "

    CH30
    “Capital was his partnership’s lifeblood”.
    Warren cultivated a business partner as a friend, whose taste in clothes resembled him.

  • Trung Nguyen Dang

    This is the definitely book on Warren Buffett and a treat to Buffett fan. It is extremely detailed about WB's personal life and about his complex personality. It is a must-read for Buffett fan. I really did not want to put it down once I started. I started on a Thursday, and almost every minute of my spare time where my mind was not engaged at work or with family was spent on listening to this book, and I completed on a Sunday morning.

    Overall, WB's personality was complex. He's certainly obsessive about making money and businesses from a very young age, and spent all of his free time trying to learn or make money. He's also very emotional-detached from his family, despite the warm folksy public image that he has built. His emotional state may be a result of living under a mom with bipolar disorder who often lashed out on her children. The book also talks a lot on Susie Buffett, his first wife, a wonderful human-being who spends her life helping and giving to others. Btw, the book that Susie gave out most often to people in needs or difficulty was "Man's search for meaning" by Viktor Frankl.

    However, the book may be too long (Audiobook: 40 hours, my ebook: 832 pages, 2nd edition: 930 pages) for casual reader without interest in the WB. It's the longest non-fiction book I've read so far. Just a comparison, the audiobook: "Man's search for meaning" by Viktor Frankl was only over 4 hours long. For casual reader who just wants to understand Buffett as an investor/businessman, the book "Buffett: The Making of an American Capitalist" by Roger Lowenstein is shorter and provides cover all the key aspect of his investing and business life.

    The audiobook (Audible) is longer than the ebook (not Kindle) that I have. There are passages that were absent from the book. I realised this as I tried to read along the audiobook (towards the end of the book). It seems I have the first edition of the ebook but the audiobook was read from the second or third edition of the book.

  • Petr Bela

    Warren Buffett is an icon. One of the wealthiest people in the world, he made money through intelligent capital allocation and helping grow the companies he invested in.

    Some interesting facts & lessons:
    - Approach life as if you have a punch card with 20 holes and every big decision takes one.
    - $10k spent today costs millions in compounded value.
    - Coined the term "ovarian lottery", meaning that you've been born rich or poor, in a given country, at a given time, to given parents, with given gender.
    - He's a democrat. Often voices concerns about the growing gap between rich and poor, and how the capitalist system enables wealthy/connected people to shape laws that make them even richer.
    - His father, reflecting on making money: "Don't ask how much. Ask how."
    - Meticulously studies companies' financials and only invests when there's a low risk. Missed on many investment opportunities (most famously tech stocks in the 90s) because the risk was higher than he'd allow.
    - Doesn't give free money to his children (beyond college tuition), instead wanting them to earn money by themselves and find their place in the world.
    - Pledged to donate 99% of his wealth to charitable foundations, mainly the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

    The book is mainly a biography of his life. If you're more interested in learning about his investment strategy, I highly recommend Intelligent Investor and Security Analysis by his teacher Benjamin Graham, and Buffett's own Letters to Shareholders.

  • Relinquis

    Beware! This is a poorly edited and tedious book.

    Schroder, an inexperienced biographer, could have benefited from a more aggressive editor. There are over 300+ pages of minutia and repetition in the main text. Surprisingly, the excessive trivialities centre around Buffett's and his extended family's lives rather than overly detailed discussion of his business deals.

    Hierology is probably the wrong word, but you do get a sense that the author idolises Buffett. I would have preferred a more impartial record of the man's life to date.

    This is a shame. I think Buffett's story is worthy of a better biography.

    P.S. I was surprised to see how limited Buffett's life experience was outside of business until very late in his life. In many ways this is sad portrait of a man who has dedicated his life to the pursuit of capital.

  • Marc

    Good attempt at a great biography. Very worthwhile in audiobook format.

    Parts of the story are very well done with crisp insights supported with good logic and solid story narratives. Other parts become way too bogged down in the minutiae of details of deal after deal after deal across decades of time.

    The portions at the beginning and the end are most helpful in understanding how Buffett operates and used his astounding memory and fascination with numbers to generate the wealth he made, as well as some of the disappointments.

    The book is, as can be expected from a book written by a friend of Buffet, a bit soft on his shortcoming and character flaws, but there are only a few instances where this comes off as disingenuous or distracting from the broader story.