Charles R. Geisst is a former investment banker who currently is the Ambassador Charles A. Gargano Professor of Finance at Manhattan College in Riverdale, New York. He is the author of nineteen other books, including, most recently, Collateral Damaged (2009) and Beggar Thy Neighbor: A History of Usury and Debt (2013).
Perhaps the world's oldest economic problem, predatory lending has roots as far back as the Old Testament and continues still today. As Geisst explains, loans have always been necessary for some sectors of society, namely those desperately in need. The truly destructive aspect of loan sharking is the extremely high, often unpayable interest rates. Geisst carefully and meticulously outlines the practice of loan sharking from the earliest days of the colonies to the Great Depression. Any reader interested in economic history will enjoy Geisst's attention to detail, along with his observations about the ties between predatory lending and major economic and social events. Loan Sharks is an interesting microhistory of this terrible aspect of banking, highlighting an issue often overlooked by politicians, despite its deep roots in American society.--Seth Emery -Booklist -