Despite tackling a subject that is potentially fascinating - how indeed did the British manage to pass control of almost all their investment banking institutions to foreign corporations in the space of a few years - this book fails to hit the mark.
Despite having worked for many years in the City, and thus having a greater affinity for the subject matter than some may do, and thus a higher boredom threshold, this is one of the few books I could not finish.
I think the reason is simple; while Philip Augar is indeed a very experienced and respected professional, his background is as a research analyst and this shines through the whole book. Pages and pages of tables and graphs, every comment backed up by a quotation from some source or other, cross referenced and dated in minute detail. It makes for an accurate work, but also a desparately uninteresting one, unless you want a reference manual.
What makes a full-length book "scan" is anecdotes and characters around facts (which don't need endless referencing), and I certainly don't find reams of tables in the least bit compelling reading. Indeed, it has all the attractions of reading a super-elongated piece of analyst research.