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The Fall of Princes
The Fall of Princes: A Novel | Robert Goolrick
8 posts | 7 read | 7 to read
In The Fall of Princes, bestselling author Robert Goolrick brings to vivid life New York City in the 1980s, a world of excess and self-indulgence, where limousines waited for hours outside Manhattans newest trendy club or the latest dining hot spot. Where drugs were bountiful and not refused. Where no price was too high and flesh was always on offer. Where a quick trip to Europe or a weekend on the coast or a fabulous Hamptons beach house were just part of what was expected. When the money just kept coming, and coming, and coming . . . until it didnt. This is the story of young men, princes all. Too much money. Too much freedom. They thought it would never end. Looking back on a Wall Street career that began with great success and ended with a precipitous crash, Rooney tells the story of how he and a group of other young turks made it to the top in the financial world and then, one by one, took a fall. For some, it was tragic; for others, it was the simple but bruising act of yielding to a life of mediocrity. For Rooney, however, it became a lifelong struggle to maintain a sense of dignity and to cling to the illusion of the life he once led. Stunning in its acute observations about great wealth and its absence, and deeply moving in its depiction of the ways in which these young men learn to cope with both extremes, The Fall of Princes takes readers on a journey that is both starkly revealing and dazzlingly entertaining, a true tour de force.
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ValerieAndBooks
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Today‘s #150pnpcoverparty ‘s prompt, #sniffles, made me think of these two novels both set in 1980s NYC. Both have characters addicted to coke 👃 💦and excessive living 🍷 🥃🍸 .

LeahBergen 😂😂 Great interpretation! 👏🏻 7y
CrowCAH I agree with @LeahBergen ;a different take on the “snif”fles!!! 7y
78 likes2 comments
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Magdawrites
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They say to not use too many flashbacks in a book. This is an example of an author breaking the rules and making it work. This book, about Wall St in the 1980s, is one giant flashback. And it's amazing! The writing is superb!

BookBabe It is amazing! Great book. I was just thinking about it the other day...the book I just read, His Vision of Her, reminds me of it. 7y
19 likes1 stack add1 comment
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ValerieAndBooks
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#cocaine and drink and partying in 1980s Wall Street. This stockbroker loses his job and way of life (not really a spoiler). Good book, but I liked Goolrick's "A Reliable Wife" and "Heading Out to Wonderful" better.

Cinfhen I liked this book...but I forgot about the drug use! Good one 😁🙌🏻 8y
66 likes2 stack adds1 comment
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BookBabe
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#TBT — Read some good stuff last November!😃👍🏻📚

Ericmanciniwriter Train Dreams! ❤️ ❤️ 8y
BookBabe @Eamann Yes! 🙌🏻 So good! 8y
LitsyGoesPostal 😎👍🏻 8y
99 likes3 comments
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Schuhbox
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Bailedbailed

I hate not finishing books. I feel an obligation once I start a book. I listened to this and got about half way through and couldn't do it anymore. I didn't like the narrator but also it didn't seem like a novel. It was more a stream of thought.

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Sapphire
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I should be reading Rushdie in advance of hearing him speak later this month. So, of course something else is calling to me from my bedside table.

4 likes1 stack add
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BoldCityBooks
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MrBook
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Pickpick

This was an amazing audiobook. The gritty, gravelly narrator, combined with a page-turning narrative, creates a compelling read based on the realities of 80s Big Money lifestyles followed by a personal Big Crash. Interesting insight into a galvanized historical niche setting.

14 likes2 stack adds