search for books and compare prices
Paul Stiles has written 7 work(s)
Search for other authors with the same name
displaying 1 to 7 |
at end
show results in order: alphabetically | oldest to newest | newest to oldest
Paperback:
9781742207834 | 12 edition (Lonely Planet, June 1, 2015), cover price $29.99
Paperback:
9781742206288 | 2 edition (Lonely Planet, October 1, 2014), cover price $21.99
Paperback:
9781742204154 | 11 fol pap edition (Lonely Planet, September 1, 2013), cover price $22.99
Paperback:
9781742204673 | 1 edition (Lonely Planet, October 1, 2012), cover price $21.99
An impassioned argument about the pervasive consequences of an unrestrained free market on the mental, physical, and spiritual health of everyday people explains how market-driven aspects of society may be negatively influencing virtually every element of American life. Reprint. 20,000 first printing.
Paperback:
9780060593797 | Reprint edition (Collins, September 1, 2006), cover price $13.95 | About this edition: An impassioned argument about the pervasive consequences of an unrestrained free market on the mental, physical, and spiritual health of everyday people explains how market-driven aspects of society may be negatively influencing virtually every element of American life.
Hardcover:
9780060593780 | Harperbusiness, October 1, 2005, cover price $24.95 | About this edition: Presents an argument about the pervasive consequences of an unrestrained free market, explaining how the market-driven aspects of society may be negatively influencing the mental, physical, and spiritual health of everyday people.
The author tells how he left small-town life for a harrowing year at Merrill Lynch, where he learned the methods--and the back-stabbing--behind the madness of Wall Street and found himself changing for the worse. 25,000 first printing.
(view table of contents)
Hardcover:
9780812927894 | Times Books, February 1, 1998, cover price $25.00 | About this edition: The author tells how he left small-town life for a harrowing year at Merrill Lynch, where he learned the methods--and the back-stabbing--behind the madness of Wall Street and found himself changing for the worse.
displaying 1 to 7 |
at end