Each year pundits, reporters and financial analysts search for clues in Warren Buffett's shareholder letter after it isreleased on the Internet. They sift through Buffett's reports,looking for predictions on the direction of the economy and his company,Berkshire Hathaway. In 2009, theymisread Buffett's tea leaves and misled readers about Buffett's trueunderstanding of economic recovery. In Buffett's Bites, The Essential Investor's Guide to Warren Buffett'sShareholder Letters, L.J. Rittenhouse sets the record straight. Sheshows readers how to find the real gold in Buffett's communications: hiseconomic principles. Rated A+ by Buffettfor saying the most with the fewest number of words, Buffett's Bites isessential reading for all who want to protect their wealth from futurefinancial devastation. It reveals how to avoid entitlement-driven CEOs and findleaders who steward investor capital. Berkshire'seye-popping results - a 45-year book value compounded increase of 434,057percent versus only 5,430 percent for the S&P 500- prove that Buffett's capital allocation strategy is a winning formula.Still, many capitalists either won't or can't hear his ideas. Could thistechno-phobic, genial host of the Berkshireannual meeting be a revolutionary? Is this why he calls his meeting theWoodstock of Capitalism? Rittenhouse shows how to read between the linesof Buffett's letters and find a man who wants to be regarded less for hiswealth and more for the way he made it.