Bad Paper: Chasing Debt from Wall Street to the Underworld
by Jake Halpern
the dark side... (6/18/2015)
Debt collection has always had a bad reputation, this book does nothing to dispel that reputation. Jake Halpern follows an ex Wall Street Banker and an ex-convict set up shop in the Collection Capital, Buffalo, which is home to some of the largest collection agencies in the country.
Who knew that banks sold their uncollected debts for pennies on the dollar? We do know that collection agencies are unmerciful in their pursuit of money, but the pursuit of “paper” is even more cut-throat than could be imaged. Consumer Debt Collection is a totally under-regulated industry. I learned a lot about this dark side of the financial world.
A Circle of Wives
by Alice LaPlante
disappointing.... (6/18/2015)
Alice LaPlante’s first novel Turn of Mind was excellent, Circle of Wives not so much. There is so much about this book I disliked I don’t know where to begin. First of all, I did not like any of the characters – they were swallow and self-centered, even the good Doctor came off as an oaf.
There is nothing redeeming about this book, it was simply a boring story about a man who was unhappy in his marriage and proceeded to go out and marries two more women, none of the wives except for the first wife know about one another. Surprise the good doctor is found dead in a hotel room and foul play is suspected. Enter Samantha Adams the rookie detective assigned to the case and another totally unlikable character, she blunders her way through this book like a bull in a china cabinet.
I am still trying to figure out how a successful reconstructive surgeon had time for three wives, one of which he had to report home to every morning at 5:00am.
All and all not an enjoyable read.
What Stands in a Storm: Three Days in the Worst Superstorm to Hit the South's Tornado Alley
by Kim Cross
Mother Nature.... at it worst (6/18/2015)
Mother Nature is a terrifying thing. Earthquakes, floods, hurricanes and tornadoes are just scenes from the nightly news you never can really relate to until you have actually experienced one. You know at the beginning of this book that your heart is going to be broken – Cross achingly details the march of a EF5 tornado that took 72 lives and devastated everything in its path.
A sensitive, well written commentary on how we deal with things that we cannot conquer.
The Man in the Rockefeller Suit: The Astonishing Rise and Spectacular Fall of a Serial Imposter
by Mark Seal
Con of Cons (12/7/2014)
Reading Walter Kirn's Blood Will Out made me curious about you get from being German immigrant to passing yourself off as a Rockefeller. Christian Karl Gerhartsreiter pulled off one of the most audacious cons in recent history.
This is one of the those you-can't-make-this-stuff-up books, Mark Seal follows Gerhartsreiter from the moment he first steps on American soil until his arrest and trial for kidnapping his seven-year old daughter. It is an interesting but creepy tale. I would find keeping up this type of charade exhausting, I wonder if in the end he did believe he was a Rockefeller.
On March 15, 2011, Gerhartsreiter stood trial and found guilty of the murder of a California man in 1985
Blood Will Out: The True Story of a Murder, a Mystery, and a Masquerade
by Walter Kirn
conned (11/24/2014)
This is the first I have read by Walter Kirn, I was looking forward to book so much that I purchased it in hardcover. That was several months ago, I finally decided I needed to end it and finish the book.
I am not sure who I disliked more, Walter or Christian Gerhartsreiter. Since Walter has not murdered anyone to my knowledge I will give him the benefit of doubt. Kirn is at least honest in his telling of being snookered by a con artist - the problem is I ended not really liking Walter which took the steam out of the story.
To compare this book to In Cold Blood is a stretch at best.
City of the Sun
by Juliana Maio
Cairo, 1941.... (11/24/2014)
Juliana Maio has written an impressive debt novel. She is a natural story teller.
Set in Cairo, Egypt in 1941 with WWII in full swing. There was a thriving Jewish community in Cairo and it became a common destination for Jews escaping the Fascist regimes of Europe. Egypt looking to free themselves from British domination formed close ties with the Nazi's. The Nazi's where funding militant nationalistic societies using them to promote antisemitism in Cairo.
Set against this backdrop Maio weaves a tale of romance, intrigue, deception. I enjoyed this book but felt that the affair between Maya and Mickey overshadowed the story. The story is the an emerging Egypt looking to free itself from the British, the Nazi's fueling a growing Egyptian nationalism with propaganda about both the Jews and British. The politics of the time became the backdrop where I would have enjoyed the story more if the politics were in the forefront with the romance in the background.
The Jews have a long history in Egypt, the onset of WWII was the beginning of the end for them. During WWII there were 80,000 Jews in Cairo, today there are less than 40. I look forward to this author bringing us more of the Jews in Egypt.