I would like to know what caused the Great Depression and how the world recovered from it. Do you know any good books on this subject?
Can I recommend The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck? It’s historical fiction.
It’s a glimpse into life back then; focusing mostly on the affects of the dust bowl and how hard it was to find proper work. While not nonfiction, it may give you some ideas of specific things you can research more, like crop rotation and Hoovervilles/shantytowns.
Side note: I always think of the Great Depression when an appliance breaks. My history teacher said one of the causes was that things were built to last back then. When they say, “they don’t make them like they used to” it’s 100% correct. Now we make things with a shorter lifespan on purpose because, when things last forever, we don’t buy new ones.
That’s partially it, but part of it was because low quality cheap options didn’t exist. You can still buy appliances that will last, it’s just nobody is willing to pay for it anymore.
Case in point dollar stores - despite buying anything from there that’s going to break down very easy and cost much more over a lifetime, people love thier cheap crap and China loves you all for it.
Lords of Finance won a Pulitzer for history, so that’s a good book on how it all started:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lords_of_Finance
Unfortunately, for how we got OUT of it…
Thank you.
Is this because you can feel the collapse coming and want to know how it plays out so you can make the best decisions?
Actually, I’m more interested in history, but the extraordinary circumstances in the economy may have made me interested in this topic.
The Worst Hard Time: The Untold Story of Those Who Survived the Great American Dust Bowl by Timothy Egan.
Not entirely about the great depression, but within the context of the dust bowl.