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BOOKS FROM THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
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Craig Karmin examines the green-back's history, allure, and unique role as a catalyst for globalization while highlighting the threats to the dollar's privileged status.

 
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This new title from The Wall Street Journal helps readers protect themselves against identity theft while providing victims step-by-step solutions for recovery.

 
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This essential Wall Street Journal guide teaches readers how to plan for a financially stable and emotionally satisfying retirement.

 
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Robert Frank takes readers on a hilarious tour through the ever changing world of American wealth, for the first time showing what today's rich are really like. From Palm Beach charity balls and self-help meetings for depressed millionaires, Frank reveals the joys and trials of the newly wealthy.

 
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Karen Blumenthal follows Starbucks' stock over the course of a year, showing how big investors, analysts, the media and company management propel it up and down, all the while providing an education in how the stock market really works.

 
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A must-have for investors who are looking for a practical, hands-on guide on how to succeed in the real estate market without losing a good night's sleep.

 
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How the first all-black sales team at Pepsi-Cola Co. captured the so-called Negro market in the 1940s as part of a radical experiment and changed forever how corporate America viewed workforce diversity and niche marketing.

 
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A Pulitzer-Prize winning Wall Street Journal reporter reveals the ugly truth about the corrupt admissions practices at elite U.S. colleges -- and explodes the myth of American meritocracy.

 
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"The Wall Street Journal Complete Personal Finance Guidebook" and "The Wall Street Journal Personal Finance Workbook" are top-notch primers designed to help you understand and keep up with your personal finances.

 
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Understanding money and investing has never been more important than it is today, as more and more of us are called upon to manage our own retirement planning, college savings funds, and health care costs.

 
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In his new book, James McGregor shares his insider's perspective on how to, and how not to, do business in China. He gives specific lessons through detailed, compelling narratives of how deals came together or fell apart, and how politics and prejudices tainted expectations and outcomes.

 
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Long-time Wall Street Journal editor and reporter Karen Blumenthal takes young readers on a journey from bra-burners to soccer stars, illustrating how a law called Title IX changed American society by opening the doors for girls and women in schools and sports.

 
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Nancy Keates, a senior editor for Weekend Journal, has pulled together her colleagues' best advice on everything that contributes to the good life today, offering inside tips -- and reporters' trades secrets -- on health and fitness; cars and travel; entertainment, shopping and more.

 
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Veteran Wall Street Journal writer Ken Wells takes readers on a witty, literary and intelligent adventure down America's River of Beer -- a $75 billion juggernaut coursing through the heart of American commerce and through the hearts, minds and bellies of 84 million beer drinkers.

 
The Wall Street Journal Guide to the Top Business Schools 2006
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The Wall Street Journal Guide to the Top Business Schools 2006 distinctively ranks M.B.A. programs solely according to what corporate recruiters -- the buyers of management talent -- say about them. Now prospective students can choose a business school based exclusively on its reputation in the real world – where it matters most.
 

 
Presidential Leadership: Rating the Best and the Worst in the White House
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In "Presidential Leadership: Rating the Best and the Worst in the White House," James Taranto of The Wall Street Journal and Leonard Leo of The Federalist Society draw on a national survey of presidential ratings from scholars in history, law and political science, and gathered essays from both liberal and conservative writers.
 

 
18 Immutable Laws of Corporate Reputation
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In "18 Immutable Laws of Corporate Reputation," Ronald J. Alsop provides 18 thoroughly documented lessons based on years of experience covering every aspect of corporate reputation.
 

 
Herd on the Street: Animal Stories From The Wall Street Journal
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Five decades of Wall Street Journal editors have rejoiced in commissioning stories about animals, and reporters have reveled in writing them.
 

 
Wall Street Journal e-Books
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Available for the first time in e-book format, the best articles from Wall Street Journal Special Reports will be compiled for ease in readability and portability. Each e-Book features in-depth articles written by Wall Street Journal reporters.
 

 
The Wall Street Journal Guide to Business Schools
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Several factors determine the economic worth of an M.B.A. in today's business environment -- the business schools, their graduates and the companies that hire them. "The Wall Street Journal Guide to Business Schools" aims to set a new standard for comprehensive and consistent evaluation of schools offering M.B.A. programs.
 

 
NetWorth: Investing in Companies That Will Prevail
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"NetWorth" seeks to offer reassurance to those who are frightened of Internet stocks, clear explanations to those who don't understand Internet companies, and solid investment advice for those who are already immersed in this most dynamic of stock-market sectors.
 

 
Wall Street Journal Guide to Top Business Schools
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The Wall Street Journal and worldwide market-research firm Harris Interactive offer their third annual survey of business schools that has become the single most important reference tool for students, school administrators, and corporate recruiters.
 

 
A Heart, a Cross, and a Flag: America Today
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After Sept. 11, 2001, Peggy Noonan's voice put into words all the fears, grief, outrage, and determination of Americans everywhere.
 

 
No Crueler Tyrannies
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Dorothy Rabinowitz's "No Crueler Tyrannies" recalls the hysteria that accompanied the child sex-abuse witch-hunts of the 1980s and 1990s: how a single anonymous phone call could bring to bear an army that jailed hundreds of innocent Americans.
 

 
Tearing Down the Walls
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Monica Langley's "Tearing Down the Walls" is the story of Sanford "Sandy" Weill, a rough-edged kid from Brooklyn, who overcame incredible odds and deep-seated prejudice, to put together Citigroup, the world's largest financial empire, and to transform financial services in America.
 

 
The Stock Market Crash of 1929
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Karen Blumenthal chronicles the six terrifying, desperate days in October 1929 that brought the country to its knees. Americans trembled as the fabulous fortunes they'd amassed in stocks plummeted and over $25 billion in individual wealth evaporated.
 

 
At Home in the World
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Daniel Pearl became the focus of international concern when he was kidnapped and brutally murdered by Islamic extremists in Pakistan while investigating a story for The Wall Street Journal.
 

 
Floating Off the Page
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For more than five decades, readers have been reveling in the unexpected, odd and amusing topics of The Wall Street Journal's front-page middle column, or "A-hed."
 

 
Promoting Yourself
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Through stories about managers and professionals who've experienced all the ups and downs of building a career, veteran Wall Street Journal writer Hal Lancaster reveals how to successfully compete in the business world in his new book, "Promoting Yourself: 52 Lessons for Getting to the Top…and Staying There."
 

 
The Wall Street Journal Guide To Business Style and Usage
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For the first time, the style and usage guide written for the staff of The Wall Street Journal is available to businesspeople who want to write well.
 

 
The Pretender: How Martin Frankel Fooled the Financial World
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Wall Street Journal senior reporter Ellen Joan Pollock tracks the elusive, multimillionaire financier Martin Frankel in her new book, "The Pretender: How Martin Frankel Fooled the Financial World and Led the Feds on One of the Most Publicized Manhunts in History."
 

 
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ABOUT US
We publish Wall Street Journal-branded books by our writers and editors that reflect our reputation as the authoritative source for business information. Our titles include nonfiction narratives, easy-to-use service guides and anthologies of popular Journal features.

Books from The Wall Street Journal are available wherever books are sold, and by special order for sales and marketing use, and as customized editions.

For special orders and marketing opportunities, please contact Rose Ellen D'Angelo at roseellen.dangelo@wsj.com.

 
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Books From The Wall Street Journal - WSJ.com