Book review: ‘The Gods Of Greenwich,’ by Norb Vonnegut By STEVE WEINBERG Special Contributor Published 08 April 2011 05:28 PM The novel of verisimilitude versus the novel of escape poses a regular conundrum for avid readers and novelists alike. Perhaps that has been...
Here’s a nice review from RT Book Reviews: Vonnegut’s brilliant novel uses his familiarity with Wall Street to provide an insider’s view of the high-risk world of hedge funds that’s grounded in facts and atmosphere. A female assassin, man-eating polar bears,...
Library Journal just posted a nice review of The Gods of Greenwich. Here’s what they had to say: Vonnegut follows up his debut (Top Producer) with a first-rate thriller set in the world of hedge fund managers during the 2008 financial meltdown. When Jimmy...
“If anybody can turn international finance and hedge funds into a riveting thriller, it’s Norb Vonnegut. The Gods of Greenwich is a pure delight, racing relentlessly from the bedrooms of Manhattan to the boardrooms of Connecticut to the banks of Iceland....
Reviews of The Gods of Greenwich are starting to arrive. And here’s a excerpt from what Publishers Weekly (“PW”) had to say: Vonnegut, a financial professional himself, not only gets the language and tone of Wall Street right but has an instinctive...
Cosmopolitan books editor, John Searles, named Top Producer as one of his Must-Read Books for Fall 2009 on the Today Show. Here’s the video clip from his appearance. Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy
The New York Times describes my novels as “money porn,” “a red-hot franchise,” and “glittery thrillers about fiscal malfeasance.” Through fiction I explore the dark side of money and the motivations of those who have it, want more, and will steamroll anybody who gets in their way.