James Conway has written the corporate thriller for our age, and age when the power of new media and the hunder of Wall Street converge to form a deadly entity capable of bringing the global economy to its knees.
Drew Havens made a killing for the Rising Fund, which, thanks to his prognostications, was the only hedge operation to anticipate and capitalize on the mortgage crisis of 2008. For Havens, it’s always been about the numbers. He sees things others can’t, from the collapse of the American real estate market to the multibillion-dollar rise of his ruthless and charismatic boss.
Havens is now rich beyond his dreams, but his work at the Rising Fund has cost him his marriage. And now it may cost him his life. It starts with the brutal murder of his young protégé and, over the course of six explosive days, six other brokers around the world, each killed after executing a trade linked to the Rising Fund.
As the violence escalates from South Africa to São Paulo, Hong Kong to Berlin, Havens frantically tries to construct a model that will reveal the catastrophic event that only he can see coming—and confirm that his boss and the Rising Fund are at the center of it. The Last Trade is a relentlessly entertaining, adrenaline-fueled thriller about the forces that shape our culture–and a lone man desperate to achieve redemption— while averting a global economic catastrophe.
Interesting premise, parts of it were a lot of fun. Characters were too simplistic by and large, and it is clear that the author is still figuring out his way as a novelist, but still an engaging read if you like finance and live in New York (the book is set in NYC and focuses heavily on the local geography).
It took me a while to get around to writing this review, and I feel as though I should apologize although I'm not sure to whom.
I've enjoyed the work that James Othmer wrote under his own name, but I was a little hesitant about this one. Mass market thrillers aren't normally my bag, and books (fiction or non-) about Wall Street "masters of the universe" tend to make me want to light things on fire. My misgivings were unfounded. The Last Trade is fast paced, fun and . . . er . . . thrilling.
The danger with a novel focusing on high finance is overwhelming the reader with exposition info-dumps. Othmer sidesteps this issue by keeping the chapters short and jumping all over the globe with great rapidity. A little exposition is given with each jump, and these changes build momentum and give a sense of urgency even during sections where not much action is taking place.
This novel ought to have broad appeal as light holiday/summer reading.
James Conway daha önce başka türlerde kitapları yayınlanmış olan James Othmer'in farklı bir tür olarak yazdığı gerilim romanında ilk kez kullandığı bir takma ad.
Kitap 2008 küresel krizinden olağanüstü para kazanmış bir fonun, küresel ölçekte bulaştığı işlerin gerilim dolu hikayesini anlatırken, hem küresel sermaye piyasalarının işleyiş biçimine, hem de para ve hisse hareketlerinin arkasında buzdağının görünmeyen kısmına dair ortalama okuyucunun okuyabileceği bir terminolojik tercihle son derece akıcı metin sunuyor. Kitabın çevirisi, kendisi de yatırım bankacılığı alanında çalışmış biri olan Elif Sema Mutlu tarafından yapılmış ve finans sektörüne ait terimlerin isabetle çevrildiği, oldukça iyi bir çeviri.
Türkçe financial-thriller fazla örneği olan bir tür değil. Ama finans dünyasında geçen bir gerilim romanı olarak Büyük Vurgun iyi bir başlangıç.
An excellent, suspensful thriller. If you like conspiracies and international plots, this one is for you! It even has high flying kicks, although it doesn't have quite enough chase scenes, I'm sure they'll fix that when they make a movie version. :)
The action switches from New York City, to Hong Kong, to Johannesburg, and to Berlin. You get to know each of the different brokers who place the trades, as well as the officials who notice that strange trades are being made. Can't wait to find out what will happen to each person, and who is behind this plot!
If you like numbers, computers, stocks, and mysteries; you'll like this book which includes them all!
I enjoyed this. I've never read a financial thriller so what do I know, but it was a good time. It's sorta got a Hyperlink Cinema feel to it, with its globespanning-plot and interconnected feel. Coincidentally I've been reading No Logo by Naomi Klein at the same time and they went together well, sorta like diet coke and red wine. Try it.
The most intriguing thing about this book is that it was written under a pseudonym, which made me wish I was as adept as numbers and patterns as the characters and could figure out who wrote it. I wasn't surprised to find out it was a first novel, because it had some flaws, but its intriguing premise and a glimpse into global high finance kept me completely engaged.
Just couldn't stay engaged. I thought the characters had a synthetic quality that I just couldn't get past. Original subject matter, but little depth. Also, the story moved too slowly for a thriller.
I liked this thriller, didn't love it. It could be that I don't understand the Long and Short thing in derivatives trading and that was a bit less interesting to me. Liked the characters and thought their flaws made them more intriguing. Well plotted.
Very technical financial conspiracy/terrorism thriller. It does make you think about what causes stock market fluctuations. It has its moments and the last 40% is very good, but that first 30% seems awfully technical. My favorite character was killed early on and that's always sad, too.
There was a great pace to this book, and I enjoyed the two protagonists immensely. Getting to try and solve the numbers problem while also enjoying pieces from classic literature was a bonus. I highly recommend it to other readers who like suspense.
This book is like french fries - quick, easy to read and easy to like. I zipped through it but it kept my attention until the end. This will no doubt become an action movie very soon.
Good, fast moving, suspense....even though I'm far less that "well versed" in stock market manipulation. Listened to this one which probably made it more of a thriller. Worth the read/listen