Roberts has made a distinguished and scholarly contribution to the genre of financial history, and yet his account of the various back-room negotiations between politicians, bureaucrats and bankers has all the elements of a thriller. Christopher Silvester, Spear's He [Roberts] has been able to call on a range of perceptive and wonderfully written financial journalism in order to track the details of events. This is supplemented by some unpublished memoirs and letters, and books written during the ten or so years after the crisis. Using them has enabled him to explore dark corners as well as well-lit rooms, and the result is a convincing and important contribution to national and international history. Richard Robert's analysis shows the interrelationship of politics and finance: Saving the City is an important book, both thought-provoking and entertaining. Kathleen Burk, The Times Literary Suppliment The only major book-lenght treatment of this topic to appear since 1915. Jamie Martin, London Review of Books This is a formidable piece of scholarship and should be in the Christmas stockings of George Osborne, Danny Alexander and Ed Balls. Keith Simpson, iaindale.com Lucid and masterly. The story of a financial crisis, when told with the knowledge and skill of a Richard Roberts, is a mix of detective story (the gory but fascinating details of what happened and who did it) and compelling political and social history. From the Foreword by Lord King of Lothbury, former Governor of the Bank of England If Roberts's book had been available at the time, [many people in the Bank of England] would immediately have realised that the 2007-08 crisis was not simply one of the liquidity of the financial system but also of solvency." William Keegan, The Observer A timely reminder that if we don't want to repeat the mistakes of the past then we first need to understand them. George Osborne, Chancellor of the Exchequer A fascinating insight into a half-forgotten crisis. Written with a verve and clarity that any reader can savour. Sebastian Faulks, author of Birdsong and A Week in December A masterly account of the financial crisis that brought the first great age of globalization to a close. Richard Roberts's narrative is finely wrought and wholly absorbing. John Plender, Columnist, Financial Times This is a superbly researched, calmly authoritative, and finely told account of a momentous episode in modern financial history. Richard Roberts has a formidable grasp of the technical intricacies but is also fully alive to the human dimension, as politicians, mandarins, bankers, and others jostle in not always seemly pursuit of self-preservation as well as the greater good. The drama of 1914 may until now have been the "unknown" financial crisis; that is assuredly the case no longer. David Kynaston, author The City of London, 1815-2000. Richard Roberts is an authority on the history of the City of London. He has brought his great expertise to the hitherto largely unexplored financial crisis of 1914. A masterly study brought to life with extensive quotation from contemporaries. Forrest Capie, Professor Emeritus of Economic History, Cass Business School. Professor Roberts has a light touch in this complex landscape. International Financing Review