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About the Author

Works by Arthur Vanderbilt

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Birthdate
1950-02-20
Gender
male
Education
Wesleyan University (1972)
University of Virginia School of Law (1975)
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Summit, New Jersey
Associated Place (for map)
USA

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18 reviews
By fair means and foul, Cornelius "Commodore" Vanderbilt built a fortune of $105 million in the mid-nineteenth century. One hundred years later, most of that fortune was gone.

In Fortune's Children, Arthur T. Vanderbilt II paints a vivid portrait of his ancestors. The Commodore is one of the most important capitalists this country has ever produced, and with the marriage of his great-granddaughter to the Duke of Marlborough, this book will make excellent reading for any fan of Downton show more Abbey.

The author states that the fortune dissipated quickly because the Commodore was the first and only Vanderbilt who was obsessed with making money. The Vanderbilt men who followed were obsessed with keeping it. You need both to maintain those bank balances. Some-- like Alva Belmont Vanderbilt-- were obsessed with spending it to ram their way into New York's high society. Alva built some of the largest and most ostentatious homes ever to grace these shores, and the houses' interiors were even more lavish than their exteriors. Each of the author's ancestors is portrayed with wit and sorrow, which can often happen with the "advantage" of hindsight.

This is an absorbing tale of greed, snobbery, and profligacy that kept me fascinated from first page to last. If this is your cup of tea, I urge you to pour yourself some.
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½
Could Not Hold My Interest.

As someone who likes to read about the lives of the rich and famous, I expected this book to be fascinating. NOT! While there were some parts of interest, it felt like most of the book was a narrative about money -- how much was spent on this, how much it cost to built that, what mansion contents were sold to whom for how much. I actually found myself skipping long paragraphs full of figures. (I suppose you have to give the author lots of credit for thorough show more research.)

There was an additional confusing element to the story of four generations of Vanderbilts -- the fact that they kept using the same names in each generation. So, the reader has to try to figure out which Cornelius Vanderbilt was being discussed or which William or Alva, etc. The author did not do a very good job of helping with this.

On the plus side, I liked the story of the rivalry between Mrs. Vanderbilt and Mrs. Astor, the efforts to marry Consuelo Vanderbilt to the Duke of Marlborough, and the custody battle over little Gloria Vanderbilt (she who makes the jeans and is mother to Anderson Cooper). And you do get a reasonable tale of how the enormous fortune of the Commodore was squandered by subsequent generations -- through lavish entertaining, ostentatious building, and extravagant spending.
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Could Not Hold My Interest.

As someone who likes to read about the lives of the rich and famous, I expected this book to be fascinating. NOT! While there were some parts of interest, it felt like most of the book was a narrative about money -- how much was spent on this, how much it cost to built that, what mansion contents were sold to whom for how much. I actually found myself skipping long paragraphs full of figures. (I suppose you have to give the author lots of credit for thorough show more research.)

There was an additional confusing element to the story of four generations of Vanderbilts -- the fact that they kept using the same names in each generation. So, the reader has to try to figure out which Cornelius Vanderbilt was being discussed or which William or Alva, etc. The author did not do a very good job of helping with this.

On the plus side, I liked the story of the rivalry between Mrs. Vanderbilt and Mrs. Astor, the efforts to marry Consuelo Vanderbilt to the Duke of Marlborough, and the custody battle over little Gloria Vanderbilt (she who makes the jeans and is mother to Anderson Cooper). And you do get a reasonable tale of how the enormous fortune of the Commodore was squandered by subsequent generations -- through lavish entertaining, ostentatious building, and extravagant spending.
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3.5 Stars
Money has never made man happy, nor will it, there is nothing in its nature to produce happiness. The more of it one has the more one wants.
( Benjamin Franklin)

The very name Vanderbilt is synonymous with the Gilded Age. The family patriarch, "the Commodore,” built a fortune that made him the world's richest man by 1877. Yet, less than fifty years after his death, no Vanderbilt was counted among the world's richest people.

I love books on the gilded age and was delighted to get my show more hands on a copy of this one as it is a very detailed account of the fall of the House of Vanderbilt. I had visited Newport some years ago and did a tour of some of the Mansions and the Marble House and the Breakers were among them which were built by the Vanderbilt family.
I really enjoyed the read and first third of the book deals with " The commodore" and how he managed to build his fortune and the remainder of the book focus on the his decedents and how they managed to squander millions.

The book is very well researched and written wih a numerous photographs, notes, bibliography and Index.
I loved reading about The Commodore (Cornelius Vanderbilt) and how he built up his fortune to make him the world's richest man by 1877. The book is very detailed and we are introduced to several key members of the Vanderbilt family and learn about their marriages how they squandered the fortune that Commodore built up.
By the end of the book I was exhausted reading about the opulence and the dreadful waste and greed of this family. The book does become quite repetitive and I think it could have been slimmed way down by at least 100 pages and it would have had much more an impact on me.

Having said that I did enjoy the read and although it was a bit of slog it is certainly interesting and satisfied my curiosity about the Vanderbilt family.
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Works
16
Also by
1
Members
672
Popularity
#37,564
Rating
3.8
Reviews
17
ISBNs
35
Languages
2

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