[Description edited 10/5 to reflect that I have decided to give the book a shot.]
People are talking about it. Much in it would be relevant to my interests. Still, one only gets to read so many books. Based on the market, I've been intrigued enough I am going to at least give the book a real shot. Will I think that was a good use of time?
Resolves to YES if I decide it was a good use of time, versus the marginal alternative source I could have consumed instead.
Resolves to NO if I decide it wasn't a good use of time, including if I read a bunch of it and then conclude it's terrible and give up.
Spoilers permitted in discussion.
@MartyE Did you read his report? Does it sound like he enjoyed it because it’s that kind of book?
@NicoDelon No I didn’t read the report but I’ve heard others reviews and it’s over flattery of the subject and lack of critical thinking skills by the author seem to imply it’s a waste of time so I just wondered if the reader has just easy to satisfy tastes
Oh yes, very much worth it. Report is out now: https://thezvi.substack.com/p/book-review-going-infinite
@qumeric For some reason I thought it was long. Its being short makes me more interested in reading it now.
A review explicitly stating it's a good use of time:
https://humeanbeing.substack.com/p/book-review-going-infinite
I read the book, and don't think it was a good use of my time. The only thing I highlighted in the whole book was this quote from SBF in ~2018:
This combos really badly with the current EA shitshow I’m supposed to be, in some ways, adjudicating.
The parts on Jane Street and the early days of Alameda seem unreliable and not that useful
Most commenters on Marginal Revolution are relatively positive:
I decided to read the book earlier than planned in order to make a more informed trade. I personally like the book. Almost all online commentary is attacking SBF (except MSM) so I find it more interesting that Michael Lewis is more or less making the case for SBF. I think SBF is clearly in the wrong and defending him is absurd but the book is still filled with very interesting information soo I think you will like it.
@Soli I finished the book and sold my position. It was somewhat entertaining but no really memorable
I'm sure the book is enjoyable but I'd be curious to hear your impressions. Lewis is not covering himself in glory with his response to critics.
https://time.com/6321668/michael-lewis-sam-bankman-fried-going-infinite/
@MarkStahl Confirmed, yes. Fully subjective question, to avoid conflicts I'm not participating in the market (other than the last-trade free money snipe of course)
@ZviMowshowitz I'm about a third of the way through it. It's a fascinating portrait of people obsessed with effective altruism, how differently they evaluate the world. It's also fascinating how much hubris they have in their own ability to stay rational and altruistic when there's so much money on the line. Neither hagiography nor condemnation, just an interesting portrait. I think it's worth my time. If this type of thing interests you, it will definitely be worth yours.
@ZviMowshowitz I'm now 100% through it. And I'm sorely disappointed. At first, I thought that Mr. Lewis was just being even handed. He would present ridiculous things that SPF would say and not comment on them. I was okay with that. I don't mind figuring it out myself.
But the last chapter lost me. Suddenly, SPF is arrested and Michael Lewis is defending him to high heaven. It was a terrible, terrible ending and totally destroy the value of the book for me.
Right now I'm reading Numbers Go Up. I think it better captures the spirit of the crypto craze. It's not even handed at all. It's just a tear down job. But it's glorious.
I read it all, and voted yes. It is very well written and entertaining. If you don't know much about some subjects -like how Jane Street looks like, details of the Alameda Schism- or like tidbits of restricted information -like Sam and Caroline's 'memos' -, you'll enjoy it. Does that count as 'good use' ? If you are searching for a true account of what happened, definitely not.
@ManueldelRio I am almost always in the second mode of looking for things - when you go looking for anything at all, your chances of finding it are very good, etc. If I got a useful true account, great. If I got endless entertainment, so long as my epistemics didn't get actively destroyed, that's great too.