John Train (1928–2022)
Author of The Money Masters
About the Author
Works by John Train
The Midas Touch : The Strategies That Have Made Warren Buffett 'America's Preeminent Investor' (1987) 77 copies
The Craft of Investing: Growth and Value Stocks, Emerging Markets, Market Timing, Mutual Funds, Alternat (1994) 51 copies, 1 review
Love: Considered by Casanova, Mark Twain, Shakespeare, Oscar Wilde, Sigmund Freud, Byron, LA Rochefoucauld, John Updike, and Many Others (1993) 17 copies
Dance of the Money Bees Hardcover 1974 (A Professional Speaks Frankly on Investing) (1974) 12 copies
Crazy Quilt: Remarkable Comic Confusions Including Sinister Dishes and Weird Arrangements High Life Bureaucracy Gone Mad Antilogies and Other Threats to Public (1996) 8 copies, 1 review
Investing and Managing Trusts Under the New Prudent Investor Rule: A Guide for Trustees, Investment Advisors, and Lawyers (1999) 6 copies
Grandes maestros de la inversión: Descubre las técnicas y las estrategias ganadoras de los mejores inversores del mundo (2019) 3 copies
The money Masters 1 copy
Bedlam, Boudoir and Brouhaha or Remarkable Words With Astonishing Origins. 1980. Coth with dustjacket. (1980) 1 copy
Die Formeln der Erfolgreichsten 1 : Warren Buffett, John Templeton und Co. Strategien der grö ten Finanzgenies der Welt (2006) 1 copy
Die Formeln der Erfolgreichsten II : George Soros, Jim rogers und Co. Strategien der grö ten Finanzgenies der Welt (2006) 1 copy
Berømte finansfiaskoer 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1928-05-25
- Date of death
- 2022-08-13
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Harvard University
- Occupations
- editor
investment advisor
author - Organizations
- The Paris Review
- Nationality
- USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
PHILADELPHIA—A former Philadelphia fireman, in Federal Court here trying to overturn his dismissal for long hair, set his head on fire.
"It must have been the hairspray I used," said the sheepish ex-fire-fighter, William Michini, who apparently tried to dramatize that his locks were not a safety threat to his job.
"Hair is self-extinguishing. It doesn't burn," he boasted.
With that he struck a match and held it to his head, which caught fire.—Associated Press
This is an extremely short show more collection of excerpts of personal anecdotes and short newspaper and magazine stories, such as the one listed above, about supposedly true but hardly believable events of marginal interest and minimal humor that the author collected in the 1970s. Train was an editor of The Paris Review along with George Plimpton, who wrote the book's preface, and his literary connections probably explain why this book, which nowadays could have written by a middle school student with access to the Internet over a weekend, was ever published.
True Remarkable Occurences, which can be read in half an hour, is recommended only to those who need to add a quick book to their annual total, or budding authors who doubt that their manuscript is good enough to warrant publication. show less
"It must have been the hairspray I used," said the sheepish ex-fire-fighter, William Michini, who apparently tried to dramatize that his locks were not a safety threat to his job.
"Hair is self-extinguishing. It doesn't burn," he boasted.
With that he struck a match and held it to his head, which caught fire.—Associated Press
This is an extremely short show more collection of excerpts of personal anecdotes and short newspaper and magazine stories, such as the one listed above, about supposedly true but hardly believable events of marginal interest and minimal humor that the author collected in the 1970s. Train was an editor of The Paris Review along with George Plimpton, who wrote the book's preface, and his literary connections probably explain why this book, which nowadays could have written by a middle school student with access to the Internet over a weekend, was ever published.
True Remarkable Occurences, which can be read in half an hour, is recommended only to those who need to add a quick book to their annual total, or budding authors who doubt that their manuscript is good enough to warrant publication. show less
Entertaining and educational. Will make you want to check alternate sources to see if his interpretation is correct or not - and you just might learn something doing that as well!
Makes quick,light reading
Makes quick,light reading
I was trying to remember what book was a modern version of "Extraordinary Popular Delusions & the Madness of Crowds". Digging through my old notes I found it - this book. Here are my notes from when I read it in 2002.
August 6, 2002
Causes of Financial Fiascos
One, further investment of capital when it is no longer needed.
Second cause of disaster, overstaffing - nothing gets done because everyone thinks someone else is doing it.
Being too early or too late to market. The same words, but the show more pauses are wrong.
Readers should learn at least one lesson, the lesson of humility. show less
August 6, 2002
Causes of Financial Fiascos
One, further investment of capital when it is no longer needed.
Second cause of disaster, overstaffing - nothing gets done because everyone thinks someone else is doing it.
Being too early or too late to market. The same words, but the show more pauses are wrong.
Readers should learn at least one lesson, the lesson of humility. show less
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 40
- Members
- 1,098
- Popularity
- #23,391
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 7
- ISBNs
- 66
- Languages
- 4














