### From Publishers Weekly Bestseller Grippando's overwrought financial thriller gives its hero, Michael Cantella, almost as rude an awakening as Kafka's Gregor Samsa. Scandals involving subprime lending, short selling, and Ponzi schemes provide a timely backdrop. On the eve of his 35th birthday, C
Money to burn (C): a novel of suspense
โ Scribed by James Grippando
- Publisher
- Harper
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 179 KB
- Edition
- 1st ed
- Category
- Fiction
- City
- New York
- ISBN
- 006198535X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Presents a story of greed and murder set in the high-stakes atmosphere of New York's Wall Street.
โฆ Subjects
Capitalists and financiers -- Fiction
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
EDITORIAL REVIEW: In this timely stand-alone thriller ripped from the headlines, \*New York Times\* bestselling author James Grippando, whom the \*Wall Street Journal\* calls "a writer to watch," explores a world in which the destruction of financial institutions and the people who run them can
EDITORIAL REVIEW: In this timely stand-alone thriller ripped from the headlines, \*New York Times\* bestselling author James Grippando, whom the \*Wall Street Journal\* calls "a writer to watch," explores a world in which the destruction of financial institutions and the people who run them can
EDITORIAL REVIEW: In this timely stand-alone thriller ripped from the headlines, \*New York Times\* bestselling author James Grippando, whom the \*Wall Street Journal\* calls "a writer to watch," explores a world in which the destruction of financial institutions and the people who run them can
### From Publishers Weekly Bestseller Grippando's overwrought financial thriller gives its hero, Michael Cantella, almost as rude an awakening as Kafka's Gregor Samsa. Scandals involving subprime lending, short selling, and Ponzi schemes provide a timely backdrop. On the eve of his 35th birthday, C
EDITORIAL REVIEW: In this timely stand-alone thriller ripped from the headlines, \*New York Times\* bestselling author James Grippando, whom the \*Wall Street Journal\* calls "a writer to watch," explores a world in which the destruction of financial institutions and the people who run them can