Power Failure: The Rise and Fall of Enron
Power Failure: The Rise and Fall of Enron describes the strange change that happened to the Enron Corporation in the early 1990s: it went from a company that traded in tangible goods to one that dealt in pure abstractions, with shoddy accounting practices, astonishing compensation packages and smoke and mirrors to obfuscate this new reality.Company auditors, Sherron Watkins among them, warned top Enron execs from CEO Kenneth Lay on down that the company"s increasing reliance on cooked books and phony reports "will implode in a wave of accounting scandals." As anyone who played the stock market or watched Enron suits do the walk of shame on the evening news a couple of years ago will remember, that"s exactly what happened. Texas Monthly editor Swarz and Watkins team up to offer this account, rich in anecdote and numbers alike, of what went wrong and who made it so. Though even-handed throughout, they serve up plenty of righteous scorn for the corporate leaders who enriched themselves as the company disintegrated, and for the name-brand politicians who abetted them.Though Osama bin Laden"s pawns barely dented the US economy, observes Alex Berenson in The Number, Lay and his lieutenants brought it to its knees. Swartz"s and Watkins"s eye-opening account will rekindle new indignation over unpunished crimes and well-rewarded hubris, and it ought to be required reading in business schools henceforth. --Gregory McNamee, Amazon.com