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Loading... A Conspiracy of Paper: A Novel (Ballantine Reader's Circle)by David Liss
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. This is one of the first books that I found with LT that I probably wouldn't have found on my own, so thank you to everyone involved! It's a great pleasure to read a novel that is so tightly written. There are no subplots, characters, or episodes that are completely superfluous. Some of them don't contribute as much to the main narrative as others, but they add to the overall setting in a realistic way. The setting is in the infancy of the English stock industry with events of the South Sea Bubble as the backdrop. The hero, Benjamin Weaver, investigates whether the deaths of his father and another man were murders, contrary to the coroner's verdicts. Liss does an excellent job describing the lives and circumstances of both immigrant and native-born Jews of the era. That part of the story is an interesting complement to the mystery itself. Also, as he notes in the afterword, Liss has modulated the flowery speech of the time with contemporary usage. The result is dialogue that is characteristic of the setting yet never tedious to read. As one character relates on a similar point, there is not much "I am your servant." This isn't a lightweight book to read in an afternoon! The intrigues and machinations are a bit more complex than most other books, and that only adds to its appeal. Ben Weaver is a finely drawn character, full of contradictions and contrasts. He is tough and self-reliant, fully self-confident, but with refined tastes and unexpected erudition. He actually reminds me of a dear friend. The book was a welcome education on an era I knew little about and the hardscrabble beginnings of the stock market. An interesting story, a captivating mystery, and the introduction of a lovely character I look forward to seeing again in subsequent novels. This is the second Liss novel I've read (the other was The Whiskey Rebels) and neither have disappointed. Who would think that 1790 London and "stock jobbers" would be the basis for such a compelling novel. Liss does a wonderful job building intrigue, characters, and atmosphere in his financial "historical" fiction niche. He's now permanently on my author TBR list! Enjoyed, but do start a paper diagram with this book to follow the convoluted plot. 0.050 seconds to build listing no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com (ISBN 0804119120, Paperback)A fool and his money are soon parted--and nowhere so quickly as in the stock market, it would seem. In David Liss's ambitious first novel, A Conspiracy of Paper, the year is 1719 and the place London, where human greed, apparently, operated then in much the same manner as it does today. Liss focuses his intricate tale of murder, money, and conspiracy on Benjamin Weaver, ex-boxer, self-described "protector, guardian, bailiff, constable-for-hire, and thief-taker," and son of a Portuguese Jewish "stock-jobber." Weaver's father, from whom he has been estranged, has recently died, the victim of a horse-drawn carriage hit and run. Though his uncle has suggested that the accident wasn't quite so accidental, Benjamin doesn't give the idea much credence:I blush to own I rewarded his efforts to seek my opinion with only a formal reply in which I dismissed his ideas as nonsensical. I did so in part because I did not wish to involve myself with my family and in part because I knew that my uncle, for reasons that eluded me, had loved my father and could not accept the senselessness of so random a death.But then Benjamin is hired by two different men to solve two seemingly unrelated cases. One client, Mr. Balfour, claims his own father's unexpected death "was made to look like self-murder so that a villain or villains could take his money with impunity," and even suggests there might be a link between Balfour senior's death and that of Weaver's father. His next customer is Sir Owen Nettleton, an aristocrat who is keen to recover some highly confidential papers that were stolen from him while he cavorted with a prostitute. Weaver takes on the first case with some reluctance, the second with more enthusiasm. In the end, both converge, leading him back to his family even as they take him deep into the underbelly of London's financial markets. Liss seems right at home in the world he's created, whether describing the company manners of wealthy Jewish merchants at home or the inner workings of Exchange Alley--the 18th-century version of Wall Street. His London is a dank and filthy place, almost lawless but for the scant protection offered by such rogues as Jonathan Wilde, the sinister head of a gang of thieves who profits by selling back to their owners items stolen by his own men. Though better connected socially, the investors involved with the shady South Sea Company have equally larcenous hearts, and Liss does an admirable job of leading the reader through the intricacies of stock trading, bond selling, and insider trading with as little fuss, muss, and confusion as possible. What really makes the book come alive, however, are the details of 18th-century life--from the boxing matches our hero once participated in to the coffee houses, gin joints, and brothels where he trolls for clues. And then there is the matter of Weaver's Jewishness, the prejudices of the society he lives in, and his struggle to come to terms with his own ethnicity. A Conspiracy of Paper weaves all these themes together in a manner reminiscent of the long, gossipy novels of Henry Fielding and Laurence Stern. Indeed, Liss manages to suggest the prose style of those authors while keeping his own, less convoluted style. This is one conspiracy guaranteed to succeed. --Alix Wilber (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:18 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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The book is filled with historical detail of early 18th century London and its financial markets. At the same time, its focus on the stock trade gives it a contemporary feel. The nature of the stock market really hasn't changed much in three centuries. Although the setting is very different, this book reminds me a lot of John Grisham's The Firm -- I suppose since both books involve complex webs of corruption in large corporations.
Benjamin Weaver is an intriguing character. Like everyone else in the book, he appears to be motivated more by self-interest rather than by any moral code, yet it sometimes troubles him when he does the right thing for the wrong reason. I'll be interested to see how his character develops in subsequent novels. (