In the aftermath of the 1929 stock market crash, Ben saw seventy percent of his personal fortune and the assets of the Benjamin Graham Joint Account vanish over three painful years. But a deeper blow had struck before the financial collapse—the death of his beloved son, Newton. The Joint Account required Ben to repay all investor losses before taking any earnings, so he toiled without compensation, silently bearing the weight of unimaginable grief. The post Benjamin Graham: Can Money Mend a...