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The Arriviste

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A wealthy man's bitter decline takes a sinister turn in this "slow-burn noir" of love, greed, and deceit in 1970s New York (Washington Post Book World).
Neil Fox has made a fortune off the "head we win / tails you lose" venture capital deals negotiated by his brother, costing him almost everything but money. His ex-wife and daughter spurn him, and he lost his young son years ago. Now he spends his days working as a lawyer at a small investment-banking firm and his nights at home with a drink.
When the affable Bud Younger moves in next door—on a parcel that Neil had sold off—Neil takes an almost instant dislike to him. Bud is nearly everything Neil is not—a gregarious, energetic striver loved by his family. When Bud asks Neil to fund a new business venture, it sets in motion events that hurtle to a startling and haunting conclusion.
Named a Booklist Top 10 First Novel of 2011, The Arriviste delves into the psyche of avarice and envy, presenting a portrait of a man both ordinary and monstrous.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 21, 2011
      Set in New York City, 1970, Wallenstein's debut follows investment firm partner Neil Fox, whose life, despite his formidable wealth, is in shambles. Following the death of his 11-year-old son, nearly 10 years before, his marriage has been slowly disintegrating while his relationship with his daughter, Vicky, 17, unravels. When young, successful, has-it-all Bud Younger moves next door, Neil's misery escalates, especially after Neil's brother, Mickey, involves him in an offshore business partnership with Bud. Neil now holds the deed to Bud's home and is getting involved with the enigmatic Cecilia, a woman he meets at Bud's party and who may be Bud's mistress. Money, family, and social status, but especially money, take center stage as the complex, well-drawn characters circle each other on their way down the proverbial drain. The story takes hold early on and Neil, immoral and greedy, inspires affection. While money seems the focus, more than that, Wallenstein is addressing the human condition and how money, as the old song goes, "makes the world go round".

    • Library Journal

      April 1, 2011

      This highly descriptive novel is told from the perspective of Neil Fox, who has been leading a comfortable life in an upscale suburb of New York City in the mid-1960s. But now his ten-year-old son has died, his wife has left him, and his brother Mickey is his only friend. Bud, a new neighbor, barges loudly into Neil's life. At Mickey's urging, Neil grudgingly agrees to become silent partners in Bud's business venture. The crux, however, is that Bud is mistaken about the essential relationship he has with Neil; they may be neighbors, but they are not partners or really friends. The predictable tragedy evolves at a stately pace. The interior view of Neil's feelings is rather astonishing. He is a reluctant shark, disconnected from life yet still participating as a player in the game, and a monument to the power of those who have more over those who want more. VERDICT A surprisingly interesting read about the human costs of financial "success," with echoes of Jane Smiley's Good Faith but with less drama and more solitary introspection.--Henry Bankhead, Los Gatos P.L., CA

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from May 1, 2011
      Wallensteins gripping first novel has the muscular grace of an expert tennis player or strong swimmerfigures with deep resonance in this nuanced tale of miserliness and ambition, emotional bankruptcy and betrayal. The narrator, silver-haired lawyer and venture capitalist Neil Fox, lives alone in his palatial house on Long Island during the 1970s. His wife has left him; his 17-year-old daughter keeps her distance; and he is still mourning his young sons death. Cigarette and drink in hand, Neil is cold, hostile, caustically witty, and adamantly solitary. But Bud Younger, the energetic and naive arriviste who has moved in next door with his loving family, will not be denied. Bud wangles his way into Neils fortress of anger and into a treacherous deal with Neil and Mickey, Neils eccentric, avaricious brother and business partner, to set up a factory on a Caribbean island. In scenes of hallucinatory intensity, from a commuter train ride to bacchanal parties, storms, and beaches frightening in their perfection, Wallenstein calculates the true cost of diabolical investment shenanigans. The velocity, artistry, insights, and pleasures of Wallensteins riptide portrait of a hollowed-out rich man of measured aggression and depthless pain are prodigious.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

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