Soros: The Life and Times of
a Messianic Billionaire (Hardcover)
by Michael T. Kaufman
George Soros was once described as "the
only private citizen [of the U.S.] who has his own foreign
policy." In this penetrating biography, Michael Kaufman
explores the multifaceted life of a man who instead describes
himself as "a financial, philanthropic, and philosophical
speculator."
Like Intel chairman Andrew Grove, whose memoir Swimming
Across touches on some of the same territory, Soros grew up
as the scion of a Hungarian Jewish family, many of whose
members did not survive the Holocaust. Inclined toward
philosophy (a field in which he sometimes writes even today,
though many philosophers wish he would not), Soros escaped to
England, and later America, and put his sharp mind to work
making a huge fortune. Not content to live a leisurely or
unexamined life, Soros put more than $1 billion to use in
bettering the lives of citizens of formerly totalitarian
regimes--and even in hastening the end of dictatorships around
the world.
Former New York Times columnist
Kaufman delivers a respectful account, closeted skeletons and
all, of Soros's life and work, and his book will interest a
wide range of readers. --Gregory McNamee
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