
Some books explain finance.
Some books explain Bitcoin.
Very few explain money itself.
Lyn Alden’s “Broken Money” belongs in that rare category.
This is not a maximalist propaganda piece, nor a shallow “Bitcoin will go to the moon” narrative. Instead, it is one of the most intellectually rigorous and historically grounded books ever written about the evolution of money, the weaknesses of the fiat monetary system, and why Bitcoin emerged as a logical technological response.
For me, this is a 5/5 recommendation — not only for crypto investors, but for students, entrepreneurs, policymakers, and frankly anyone trying to understand how the modern world actually works.
The strongest part of the book is arguably the beginning.
Lyn Alden starts where every serious discussion about Bitcoin should start:
not with crypto charts, but with the history of money itself.
She explains that money is fundamentally:
From there, she walks through how societies evolved from:
What makes these chapters exceptional is the clarity.
Instead of ideological slogans, Alden uses:
She demonstrates how fiat systems naturally trend toward expansion because governments benefit from creating new currency units to finance deficits, wars, and political promises.
And this is the crucial insight of the book:
Fiat currency systems are not necessarily malicious — they are structurally unstable.
The problem is incentive design.
When money can be created without hard constraints, long-term purchasing power tends to erode. Debt accumulates faster than productive output. Financial systems become increasingly dependent on low interest rates and perpetual liquidity injections.
We can already see the consequences everywhere:
The average citizen works harder while the monetary base expands faster than wages.
That is not conspiracy theory.
That is arithmetic.
The second half of the book transitions naturally into Bitcoin.
This is where “Broken Money” becomes extremely valuable for newcomers.
Alden explains:
without falling into technical jargon overload.
Most importantly, she frames Bitcoin not as a speculative asset, but as:
a technological monetary network designed to solve specific weaknesses in legacy systems.
That distinction matters enormously.
Bitcoin matters because:
For the first time in history, humans have a form of money that combines:
That is a monumental innovation.
Alden also does an excellent job addressing common misconceptions:
Instead of emotional arguments, she responds with systems thinking and historical context.
Most people spend their entire lives working for money without ever understanding what money actually is.
Schools teach algebra, chemistry, and literature — all valuable subjects — but almost never teach:
That absence creates populations that are financially vulnerable and politically manipulable.
“Broken Money” helps close that gap.
This is why I genuinely believe:
This book should be recommended in schools and universities everywhere.
Not because everyone must become a Bitcoiner, but because everyone should understand:
Even readers who remain skeptical about Bitcoin will leave this book with a dramatically better understanding of the global financial system.
And that alone makes it worth reading.
“Broken Money” is one of the most important financial books of the modern era.
It combines:
into a framework that is accessible without being simplistic.
Lyn Alden succeeds in something very rare:
she explains Bitcoin without hype and critiques fiat without ideology.
The result is a deeply rational and highly educational book that will likely remain relevant for decades.
If you read only one book about money, make it this one.
Because understanding money means understanding power — and understanding Bitcoin means understanding where that power may be shifting next.

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Good overview and a book that I should add it to my list. Thanks for sharing!
!BEER
!BBH
!LOLZ
Broken Money is one of those books that connects dots most crypto people already feel but cannot articulate. The ledger-as-money framing changed how I think about what a blockchain actually is. Alden does a good job of making the history accessible without dumbing it down.
Totally agree - it is a must read for everybody feeling that the current system is not in their favour but dont't have the fats why.