On this episode of, “Literary Arts: The Archive Project,” we feature a conversation with Michael Lewis from at 2023 Portland Book Festival. Lewis is the author of 17 books of nonfiction including, “Liar’s Poker,” “Moneyball,” “The Big Short” and “Flashboys.” His books are about unconventional people doing extraordinary things, usually behind the scenes.
Lewis joined Portland Book Festival to talk about his new book, “Going Infinite: The Rise and Fall of a New Tycoon.” It’s a book about Sam Bankman-Fried and the eventual collapse of his cryptocurrency hedge fund, Alameda Research, and the exchange he also founded, called FTX. At the time of this conversation, Bankman-Fried had just been found guilty of seven Federal charges, all finance-related, and was awaiting sentencing. It was a trial that many consider the biggest and most important in the world of finance in decades, and was one that was watched closely all across the world.
Lewis had unrestricted access to Bankman-Fried, spending over year reporting as he amassed one of the largest fortunes in the world and then lost everything as his businesses collapsed. The result of that reporting in Going Infinite paints a picture of a Bankman-Fried that is very different than how he was portrayed in the press and by government prosecutors. Lewis offers a perspective on Bankman-Fried and many of his closest colleagues that is rooted in understanding their deeper motives, how they were shaped as a generation, and how and why they made the mistakes they made. His conclusion is both startling and important to reckon with for its consequences in our society, regardless of whether you followed the case closely or not.
Lewis is in conversation with Literary Arts’ Executive Director, Andrew Proctor.
Bio:
Michael Lewis is the best-selling author of “Liar’s Poker,” “Moneyball,” “The Blind Side,” “The Big Short,” “The Undoing Project,” and “The Fifth Risk.” His most recent book is “Going Infinite.” He lives in Berkeley, California, with his family.
Andrew Proctor has been the director of Literary Arts since 2009. Born and raised in Canada, Proctor, earned a bachelor’s degree in English and Music at Concordia University in Montreal, and later worked in London for the Cultural Attaché to the Canadian High Commission. In the UK, he also earned an MA in English Literature at the University of East Anglia under the supervision of England’s then Poet Laureate, Andrew Motion. From 2000-2004 Proctor worked as an editor for HarperCollins in New York City and then as the Membership and Operations Director of the PEN American Center, a global literary and human rights organization focused on the welfare of writers and editors. In total, Proctor has worked in the literary world for over twenty years in the governmental, for profit and nonprofit sectors.