Jim Cramer's Getting Back to Even offers the most detailed guidance he has ever given on how to invest in a changed market. Savvy investors will not just survive; they will thrive. Your portfolio won't fix itself; you have to do that. It's easy to close your eyes and pretend that it all never happened, but you'll never get back to even that way, much less profit from the opportunities that this new market offers to investors who know where to put their money. REUPLOAD NEEDED
Cole Howard of the FBI knows he has only days to prevent the audacious assassination, but he doesn't know who the target is. Former SAS sergeant Mike Cramer is also on the trail. Unless Cramer and Howard agree to co-operate, the world will witness the most spectacular terrorist coup of all time.
An international assassin - the world's most successful contract killer. Mike Cramer, ex-SAS, is to be the sacrificial bait taking the place of the assassin's next target. Unknown to Cramer, ex-IRA extremist Lynch is after Cramer, intent on revenge for his lover's death.
In a stunning feat of meticulous reportage, Pulitzer Prize winner Richard Ben Cramer ultimately puts to rest the "Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio?" question with iconoclastic bravura. In Cramer's evaluation, the hero America held onto so desperately for so long was really a creation of a nation's communal imagination. The Joe DiMaggio that America tried so hard to believe in was never really here at all. There was, of course, a Joe DiMaggio, and he had a splendid career in Yankee pinstripes--once hitting safely in an unimaginable 56 consecutive games--and a troubled marriage with Marilyn Monroe, each augmenting the other in our national mythology.
Jim Cramer's Real Money: Sane Investing in an Insane World (Book and Audio)
"How do we find hot stocks without getting burned? How do we fatten our portfolios and stay financially healthy? Former hedge-fund manager and longtime Wall Street commentator Jim Cramer explains how to invest wisely in chaotic times, and he does so in plain English in a style that is as much fun as investing is -- or should be, when it's done right. For starters, Cramer recommends devoting a portion of your assets to speculation.