Money. Rhino. The long green. It is the most important thing in the world (George Bernard Shaw). It is power, freedom, a cushion, the root of all evil, the sum of blessings (Carl Sandburg). It is the alienated essence of man's work and existence (Karl Marx). It is a medium of exchange, a measure of value, a standard of deferred payment. It is better than poverty, if only for financial reasons (Woody Allen). It is the final enemy that will never be subdued (Samuel Butler). Few things occupy as central a place in our lives as money, and few provoke such intense and varied response. Now in an entertaining and also thought-provoking book, Kevin Jackson brings together reflections on money by some of the most brilliant minds who ever lived, drawing on such writers as Dante and Chaucer, Shakespeare and Milton, Dostoevsky and Dickens, Mark Twain and Jane Austen, Edith Wharton and Henry James, and such thinkers as Max Weber, Thorstein Veblen, Adam Smith, Karl Marx, and John Maynard Keynes. Here is an all-encompassing look at the bottom line of human life--wealth and poverty, lending and borrowing, money heavens and money hells. There are colorful scenes from fiction--Silas Marner alone at night bathing his hands in gold and silver, Captain Ahab nailing a doubloon to the Pequot's mast, three hooligans in Chaucer's The Pardoner's Tale finding death in a sack of coins. We find Polonius's advice neither a borrower nor a lender be side by side with Panurge's comic paeon to debt ( a thing most precious and dainty, of great use and antiquity ) and Charles Lamb's memorable portrait of the debtor ( What a careless, even deportment hath your borrower! What rosy gills! What a beautiful reliance on Providence doth he manifest ). There are telling portraits of the money binge of the 1980s, in excerpts from Michael Lewis'sLiar's Pokerand Tom Wolfe'sBonfire of the Vanities, and harrowing descriptions of the Great Crash of 1929 and the German hyperinflatils#