"An exhaustively researched and well-written account of one of the widely ignored chapters of the great financial crisis. Grind does an excellent job of bringing the complex story to life, and capturing the sense of drama and the impact on peoples' lives. It also casts a spotlight on the role of the FDIC, which has not received as much attention as it should have done. An insightful and well-written book." --Gillian Tett, author of Fool's Gold
"Kirsten Grind's dogged reporting lays bare a tale of out-of-control salesmen and executive-level gamblers who transformed one of America's most respected banks into a weapon of mass financial destruction. The Lost Bank is a page-turning read that exposes the Wild West banking tactics that harmed customers, workers and the nation as a whole."--Michael W. Hudson, author of The Monster
"The transformation of Washington Mutual from folksy community lender to reckless 2000-branch behemoth is one of the epic stories of American finance. The bank that banned potted plants to save money in the 1980s became the bank that hired white-suited 'evangelists' to praise its go-go mortgages with screams of 'WaMu-lujah.' Grind tells this boom-bust story without lapsing into melodrama or malice, and her tale is all the more powerful for that." --Sebastian Mallaby, author of More Money Than God
"The Lost Bank is a superbly written, insider account of the collapse of Washington Mutual, among the more surprising downfalls of the financial crisis. It's a story of hubris, ambition and poor judgment that entertains but also is a disturbing coda to the difficult period, providing enduring lessons about how a group of executives who predicted the housing collapse were somehow felled by it."--Gregory Zuckerman, author of The Greatest Trade Ever
"What a marvelous book this is, so well-reported and so well-told by a writer who really threw herself into telling her story. And what an incredible tale that turns out to be, a once-beloved bank felled by greed, hubris, and a shocking disregard of all the obvious warning signs portending the financial disaster that was about to hit all of us. The life-savings of shareholders go up in smoke, a long-standing institution is done in by a new breed of short-sited executives, and meanwhile there was the havoc caused by all those subprime mortgages Washington Mutual, one of the country's more aggressive and reckless lenders, pushed through the financial system. The Lost Bank would be a joy to read if not for the Greek tragedy that unspools vividly and painfully before your eyes. A first-rate job by a first-rate journalist."--Gary Rivlin, author of Broke, USA
"A detailed, instructive account of a bank failure far away from the power centers of New York City."--Kirkus Reviews
"Lucid, entertaining . . . One of the best accounts... of the Great Crash as it played out on a human scale."--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"In The Lost Bank, Grind achieves the best of the business journalist's calling, not only reporting the WaMu disaster in clear, compelling prose for the general reader, but also offering new information and details that may surprise those who think they know the story... [A] sparkling achievement."--Jon Talton "The Seattle Times"
"Grind... has produced a compelling case study of corporate incompetence and of how regulators are politically captured by the businesses they are meant to oversee."--Steven Pearlstein, The Washington Post
"An eye-opening book."--Booklist
"If indeed this book had been fiction, it would have been branded unrealistic, outlandish, and out of the realm of reality. It is, however, a factual account with endnotes, references, and detailed documentation of sources used. It is an incredible story... The book reads very much like a novel and holds the reader's interest."--William J. Taylor, ABA Banking Journal
"A fantastic story... Every American should read about it..."--John Hockenberry, "The Takeaway"
"Almost a Barbarians-esque view..."--Andrew Ross Sorkin, "Squawk Box"
"Wall Street Journal reporter Kirsten Grind deftly restores the 'lost bank' to its rightful place in the annals of financial disasters... The clarity and humility of the writing is refreshing."--Tom Braithwaite, The Financial Times