- The Ascent of Money: A Financial History of the World by Niall Ferguson (This also has a documentary)
- Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order: Why Nations Succeed or Fail by Ray Dalio (not directly about money but does a good job at explaining reserve currencies, types of currencies, debt cycles, inflation, all of which are related)
- What is Money, anyway? [0]
Graeber's great crime is debunking the myth that barter predates money. The historical and anthropological records show that debt precedes currencies. Further, known instances of barter emerge when a society's monetary system implodes. Academia and pundits should update their narratives accordingly.
Among many impact observations, the bits about debt crises stands out. Spoiler: recurring crises and debt forgiveness is the historical norm. Academia and pundits should update their narratives accordingly.
Graeber does not discuss finance, economics, accounting, monetary policy, etc. Because it's all out of scope. And outside of Graeber's fields of study.
To get an idea of the mainstream and where the general mood is, I'd start from Wikipedia.
For bank money:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endogenous_money
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monetary_circuit_theory
For central bank money (basically cash):
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_creation
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chartalism
Note that both monetary circuit theory and chartalism are considered _heterodox_ economics. Yes, "regular" economics is called _orthodox_!
I personally think Modern Monetary Theory nails it. The MMT Podcast (http://themmtpodcast.com/) is accessible, entertaining, and non-dogmatic. A beautiful introductory book is "1000 Castaways: Fundamentals of Economics" by Clint Ballinger.
Point being that "money" is a large set of topics. It would be helpful to narrow that down a little bit.
After that you will have to update your understanding of money to the modern system of deposits being created through debt which is a simple result of money being equivalent to accounting aka MMT. I recommend reading Wolfgang Stützel's "balance mechanics" just to get a basic understanding about global mathematical identities in accounting and dividing the economy into large sectors that interact with each other and "Money Syndrome" by Helmut Creutz.
If you are lazy and don't have time you can also watch the root bug videos on YouTube. https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=xkQn56Dtslk
Read it and you will understand money better than 99.9% of the population, including most economists.
"Murray N. Rothbard's most famous essay on monetary theory.
Buffoonish and evil politicians, the banking cartel, the cabal that established the Federal Reserve, Lincoln's greenbacks, FDR's stealing of the gold, the Fed and the Great Depression, and so much more." is the only summary I have found so far and it doesn't it inspire confidence.
Edit:
"Fiat currency became the new star of the show. To Rothbard, the Fed is nothing more than a massive counterfeiting operation that forces Americans to pay ever-growing interest on money that continues to be worth less and less. In Rothbard’s opinion, the only way to stop this vicious cycle is “by the return to a free market commodity money such as gold, and by removing government totally from the monetary scene.”"
Yep, completely missing the point. A reintroduction of the gold standard isn't going to stop either inflation nor the "interest spiral" because the real return on deflating money is still positive as if there was a debt spiral. It also doesn't get rid of the inflation deflation volatility.
At a very very high level you can think of money as a promise of labour. Having it allows society to cooperate asynchronously. But there are all manner of scenarios where promises break down.
Other than that, books about economic history e.g. how Gold Standard worked could also be interesting.