Showing posts with label Catching the Wolf of Wall Street. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catching the Wolf of Wall Street. Show all posts

Sunday, 2 March 2014

Catching the Wolf of Wall Street ~ Jordan Belfort

In the go-go nineties Jordan Belfort proved to Wall Street that you didn’t need to be on Wall Street to make a fortune in the stock market. But his company, Stratton Oakmont, worked differently. His young Long Island wannabes didn’t know from turnaround plans or fiduciary trust. Instead, they knew how to separate wealthy investors from their cash, and spend it as fast as it came in—on hookers, yachts, and drugs. But when Jordan’s empire crashed, the man who had become legend was cornered into a five-year stint cooperating with the feds. This continuation of his Wall Street Journal bestseller, The Wolf of Wall Street, tells the true story of his spectacular flameout and imprisonment for stock fraud.

In this astounding account, Wall Street’s notorious bad boy—and original million-dollar-a-month stock chopper—leads us through a drama worthy of The Sopranos, from his early rise to power to the FBI raid on his estate to the endless indictments at his arrest, to his deal with a bloodthirsty prosecutor to rat out his oldest friends and colleagues—while they were doing the same. With his kingdom in ruin, not to mention his marriage, the Wolf faced his greatest challenge yet: how to navigate a gauntlet of judges and lawyers, hold on to his kids and his enraged model wife—and possibly salvage his self-respect. It wasn’t going to be easy. In fact, for a man with an unprecedented appetite for excess, it was going to be hell.

From a wired conversation at an Italian restaurant, where Jordan’s conscience finally kicks in, to a helicopter ride with an underage knockout that will become his ultimate undoing, here is the tale of a young genius on a roller coaster of harrowing highs—and more harrowing lows. But as the countdown to his moment in court begins, after one last crazy bout with a madcap Russian beauty queen, the man at the center of one of the most outrageous scandals in financial history sees the light of what matters most: his sobriety, and his future as a father and a man. Will a prison term be his first step toward redemption?

Review from the Internet.

Read by Robyn S.


Tuesday, 17 December 2013

Love All ~ Elizabeth Jane Howard

"A  slow moving, melancholic and elegiac novel set in the late 1960s in Melton, a small town in the West Country. The story revolves around a disparate group of people who come together there to establish an arts festival. There is Jack Curtis a self-made millionaire who has bought and refurbished the local stately home, Florence Plover, a garden designer in her sixties whom he has employed and her Anglo-Greek niece, Persephone. There are the Musgrove siblings, Thomas and Mary, whose family originally owned Melton Hall, who run a failing garden nursery nearby and there is Francis Brock, whose sister Celia, Thomas's wife, was tragically killed in a car crash some years previously."


This is the story of their intertwining relationships and how they come to love, and not to love each other in different ways and why - Slow, rambling and full of extraneous characters, this book only held my attention because of the homely setting and the promise that surely something would change in the lives of the people involved. I found the action unsatisfactory because the arts festival at the centre of the story wasn't covered at all, and because the challenges posed for the various key characters weren't really fully explored. Like other reviewers, I found Thomas annoying and Mary the martyr irritating, even if their responses to their life situations were realistic for the late sixties. Disappointingly, the most interesting and central character, Percy, simply faded away at the end of the novel, never to be seen again, The whole story was a bit disjointed cutting between all the characters nothing was ever really resolved by any of the characters.

Read by Robyn S.