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The Arriviste

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Arriviste

Contributors:

By (Author) James Wallenstein

ISBN:

9781571310842

Publisher:

Milkweed Editions

Imprint:

Milkweed Editions

Publication Date:

13th September 2011

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Genre:
Fiction/Non-fiction:

Fiction

Dewey:

FIC

Prizes:

Commended for L.A. Times Book Prize (First Fiction) 2011

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

328

Dimensions:

Width 139mm, Height 215mm

Weight:

411g

Description

A wealthy mans 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 dooron a parcel that Neil had sold offNeil takes an almost instant dislike to him. Bud is nearly everything Neil is nota 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 aBooklistTop 10 First Novel of 2011,The Arrivistedelves into the psyche of avarice and envy, presenting a portrait of a man both ordinary and monstrous.

Reviews

"A sneaky former venture capitalist (the blood of our economy still under his fingernails) tangles with an upstanding family man in James Wallenstein's debut."--Vanity Fair "While The Arriviste operates as a portrait of one man, at the same time, it operates as an allegory of our current financial collapse. Neil Fox is exemplary of the few greedy, irresponsible, and reckless guys, who, while claiming innocence and ignorance, have become immensely rich at the expense of the many poor suckers. The horrifying ending makes it clear that standing complacently on the beach while a man is drowning is the same as holding him down while he goes under."--Boston Globe "A slow-burn noir... this novel is in the details."--Washington Post Book World "Wallenstein's gripping first novel has the muscular grace of an expert tennis player or strong swimmer--figures with deep resonance in this nuanced tale of miserliness and ambition, emotional bankruptcy and betrayal. The narrator, silver-haired layer and venture capitalist Neil Fox, lives alone in his palatial house on Long Island during the 1970's. His wife has left him; his 17-year-old daughter keeps her distance; and he is still mourning his young son's 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 Neil's fortress of anger and into a treacherous deal with Neil and Mickey, Neil's 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 Wallenstein's riptide portrait of a hollowed-out rich man of "measured aggression" and depthless pain are prodigious."--Donna Seaman, Booklist (starred review) "A beautifully written story about all of the many different reasons we need love and are terrified to lose it. If you believe that there's another world, a better world, where we can hope for more than we ought to (and expect to be sad when you don't discover it) then read Wallenstein's terrific debut novel." --Clancy Martin, author of How to Sell "The protagonist and narrator is that guy, the one you've probably thought of a thousand times lately while muttering the words 'the economy' with a woeful, bewildered look on your face. He's the bastard whose fault it probably is, and the amazing thing about this book is the profound sympathy you feel for him on almost every page. He observes the world acutely, he has vigorous and striking thoughts, he yearns: this guy has a soul, to which this antic and elegiac, beautifully written novel bears unforgettable witness." --Matthew Sharpe, author of Jamestown and You Were Wrong "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.'"--Publishers Weekly

Author Bio

James Wallenstein's work has appeared in GQ, The Believer, the Antioch Review, The Boston Review, and the Hudson Review, among other publications. He lives in New York. The Arriviste is his first novel.

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