Drawing on her unique insider's perspective, Alger offers an irresistible glimpse into the highest echelons of New York societyNand a fast-paced thriller of epic proportions that powerfully echoes Claire Messud's "The Emperor's Children" and reads like a fictional "Too Big to Fail."
A Bonfire of the Vanities for our times, by an author who "knows her way around 21st-century wealth and power" (The Wall Street Journal)Since he married Merrill Darling, daughter of billionaire financier Carter Darling, attorney Paul Ross has grown accustomed to all the luxuries of Park Avenue. But a tragic event is about to catapult the Darling family into the middle of a massive financial investigation and a red-hot scandal. Suddenly, Paul must decide where his loyalties really lie.Debut novelist Cristina Alger is a former analyst at Goldman Sachs, an attorney, and the daughter of a Wall Street financier. Drawing on her unique insider's perspective, Alger gives us an irresistible glimpse into the highest echelons of New York society-and a fast-paced thriller of epic proportions that powerfully echoes Claire Messud's The Emperor's Children and reads like a fictional Too Big to Fail.
“"For those who have only gazed up at the palatial residences of Manhattan, this is a glimpse from the penthouse down, where 'millions' isn't shorthand for 'unimaginable wealth' but a rather modest bank balance. In her engaging and assured debut, Cristina Alger weaves a complex thriller from this world, as a Wall Street scandal threatens to devastate a family far more accustomed to charity galas than to chats with the feds." -- Tom Rachman , New York Times bestselling author of The Imperfectionists”
Praise for The Darlings
βAlgerβs novel is a realist fiction that marks the revival of the finance novel today....Never before have stories seemed more important. Itβs one of the virtues of Algerβs novel that it brings this point home to usβfrom finance, into fiction. And (hopefully) back.ββLos Angeles Review of Books
βAlger, who has worked at Goldman Sachs as well as at a white-shoe law firm, knows her way around 21st-century wealth and power, and she tells a suspenseful, twisty story.ββWall Street Journal
βWhat happens to the Darling family in the course of a weekend is what carries this tale along, but itβs Algerβs description of quintessential New Yorkers, and how they survive, that adds the extra layer....Alger has what it takes, in the best sense of the phrase.ββUSA Today
βForget Gossip Girl: If you really want a peek into the scandalous lives of New York City's elite upper class, Alger's debut novelβset during the financial downturn of 2008βgets you pretty close....The Darlings moves so fast that it feels more like a thriller than a social drama.ββEntertainment Weekly
βPenned by a former banker, this is a dishy yet thoughtful portrait of greed gone too far...A page-turner.ββGood Housekeeping
βTwo parts Too Big to Fail, one part The Devil Wears Prada, Algerβs debut is taut and compelling.ββPublishers Weekly
βProbably the most compulsively readable fiction to come out of the Wall Street financial scandal so far....Alger knows the ins and outs of both Wall Street and an upscale NYC lifestyle, nailing all the details...Delicious reading.ββBooklist
βA financial thriller with a tone that fits somewhere between the novels of Dominick Dunne...and Tom Wolfeβs The Bonfire of the Vanities.ββLibrary Journal
βCristina Alger is so good, you just know sheβs an inside traderβas intimately familiar with the inner workings of Wall Street investment banks as she is with haute Manhattan social life.Β Sheβs also a gifted storyteller.Β The Darlings is an utterly compelling novel, as knowing about family as it is about money and social status, and may be the best literary product of the financial crisis to date.ββJay McInerney, New York Times bestselling author of The Good Life
βFor those who have only gazed up at the palatial residences of Manhattan, this is a glimpse from the penthouse down.ββTom Rachman, New York Times bestselling author of The Imperfectionists
βCristina Algerβs debut novel offers a fresh and modern glimpse into New Yorkβs high society.Β I was hooked from page one.ββLauren Weisberger, New York Times bestselling author of Last Night at the Chateau Marmont
βA rare, glittering glimpse into Manhattanβs banks, bedrooms, and private clubs, a material and psychological world rendered with extraordinary detail.Β A smart, gripping tale...complex and mesmerizing.ββSarah Houghteling, author of Pictures at an Exhibition
βCristina Alger has written a racing, vivid, multi-vocal chronicle of the new gilded age, with equal shades of Jay McInerney and Bernie Madoff.Β Start reading it and in three hundred pages or so you'll feel like a consummate New York insider, too.ββCharles Finch, author of A Burial at Sea
Cristina Alger graduated from Harvard College and from New York University Law School. She has worked as an analyst at Goldman, Sachs & Co., and as an attorney at Wilmer, Cutler, Pickering, Hale & Dorr. She lives in New York City, where she was born. Alger is at work on her second novel, coming soon from Pamela Dorman Books/Viking.
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