Hello everyone. Billy here, returning with some Billy Crafton favorite reads of Summer 2024. These three books captured my curiosity over the past couple of months, with two of them being relatively new, but Matthew Hart’s GOLD actually hailing from way back in 2013.

I’m not always sharing just newly-published books (although that tends to be the norm), but really these posts simply focus on the best books I’ve read recently — ones that I think you’ll really enjoy reading, regardless of when they were actually written.

Here for the Summer of ’24, we kick things off with CHIP WAR, by Chris Miller. If you’re new to the microchip technology battle taking place on a global level (and likely influencing multiple areas of your own life, whether you know it or not), then CHIP WAR is a must-read.

Next up, we move from the technology that essentially feels like present-day gold over to the original rarity… the precious metal that’s been an integral part of human history for over 6,000 years. In GOLD, by Matthew Hart, Matthew takes us back for a look at gold’s role across millenium — even to some of humankind’s earliest civilizations.

Finally, it’s arguably the most important read of the three, THE WOLVES OF K STREET, by Brody & Luke Mullins. This outstanding book begins with a change to the balance of power in Washington, DC that started in the 1970s, as the Mullins brothers then shine a light on the dawn of America’s ugly lobbyist era… and the issues arising from it that we still struggle with as a nation today.

I hope you enjoy these Billy Crafton favorite reads for Summer 2024. Please feel free to share your thoughts on any of the outstanding books presented.

And if you missed my previous book list, click here to give them a look too.

— Billy Crafton

Chip War Book Cover

CHIP WAR
Chris Miller
2022

Focusing on what’s essentially a multi-decade war over microchip technology, Tufts University economic historian Chris Miller makes a compelling case for microchips actually becoming the world’s modern day oil — a very scarce commodity on which 21st century humanity relies as much as any other.

It’s such an enjoyable read that the New York Times calls it a “nonfiction thriller,” and one that even gives off some Mission Impossible vibes at that.

As the book’s summary notes, “Today, military, economic, and geopolitical power are built on a foundation of computer chips. Virtually everything—from missiles to microwaves, smartphones to the stock market—runs on chips.”

For me, Miller’s work here really serves as a stark wake-up call for America, especially for our policy-making politicians.
With several other countries vying for the lead in this battle for such crucial technology, and China unsurprisingly leading the way, inaction may have catastrophic consequences.

Indeed, China takes the issue so seriously that they now spend more money importing microchips than they do importing oil. It’s crazy to think that humanity’s future may be impacted by the “Chip War” as much as anything else.

Chris’s book is amazingly well-written. It’s brought in so many honors, from New York Times Bestseller to Financial Times Business Book of the Year, and everything in between, that you’d be hard-pressed to not consider it a rare must-read.

Gold Book Cover

GOLD
Matthew Hart
2013

One of the more unique (and really sweeping in scale to a large extent) books I’ve read in recent memory, Matthew Hart’s GOLD takes us back to some of the earliest civilizations in human history.

He starts his long expose on gold from 6,000 years ago, and eventually brings us up to present-day, where similar to CHIP WAR discussed above, we once again see the emergence of China as a key player on this stage.

Although Hart speaks to humankind’s millenniums-long love for gold overall, I found the details on 2008’s financial crisis to be some of the most interesting in the book.

I’m sure this is due in part to having lived through it (seeing gold’s value soar to nearly $2K per ounce was staggering), but it was also an incredible revelation to learn that gold exploring and mining worldwide shot up to a level that dwarfed the 1800s Gold Rush.

The book is much more than that, however, as Matthew really takes us on an amazing journey through so much of human history, all across the globe. I also thoroughly enjoyed his discussion of gold in South America, since my wife and I recently took a trip to Machu Picchu in Peru, where Hart speaks to the gold of the Incas — and Spain’s bloodthirsty quest to essentially steal all of it, whatever the cost.

GOLD is such a thoroughly researched, impressive work, I easily recommend it wholeheartedly. It’s the perfect read for learning both gold’s cultural evolution throughout human history and the economics behind it… this simple mineral that’s evolved into the world’s most precious metal.

Wolves of K Street Book Cover

The Wolves of K Street
Brody Mullins and Luke Mullins
2024

Quite the intriguing read here, this unusual story starts with a Washington, DC power shift in the 1970s, deftly tracing the dawn of America’s ugly lobbyist era, one we still grapple with today.

Brody and Luke Mullins essentially shine the light on how American democracy really started to lose its way, as the dark underbelly of political clout shifted from smoky, backroom deals into a much more complicated, at times sophisiticatedly crafted, web of influence.

Indeed, the book’s description perfectly sets the stage —

“The cigar-chomping son of an influential congressman, an illustrious political fixer with a weakness for modern art, a Watergate-era dirty trickster, the city’s favorite cocktail party host… these were the sort of men who now ran Washington.”

THE WOLVES OF K STREET is a pretty intense read, showcasing the emergence of shadow lobbying and the subsequent deeply-rooted corporate leverage that would take hold of American politics.

Today we often hear the terms corporate Republican and corporate Democrat, and you’ll gain a much better understanding of what those terms truly refer to if you read this Mullins brothers’ book.

It also, however, shows the fall from the top for the four protagonists, all to varying degrees.

The New York Times boasts that in THE WOLVES OF K STREET, its writers “cleverly set up their story as a mystery… with considerable narrative skill and novelistic detail.” And I completely concur, as for me the book is another must-read if you have any interest at all in American politics.

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