For me this is a book of two stories. The first is about Mike Byrne, ex Secret Service, framed for murder and trying to prove his innocence. The second is the slow unfolding of why Mike was framed which features Jerry Rankin, CEO of a big bank, with trouble brewing about his books and some dodgey practices alluded to.
Whilst I love the bits with Mike, the bits about banking bore me and are a total turn off. Mike is a great character, the action and the love interest are all well written and I really enjoyed these parts of the book. Five stars even. But if I'd known half the book was going to be focused on the financial sector with dialogue and plot pivoting on this I wouldn't have bothered. To be fair I don't enjoy the ins and outs of corporate law but someone like John Grisham can make that quite accessible. Here it's not really accessible enough in my opinion.
I don't get shares, trades, the market, "write downs", "capital requirements", "off balance items", derivatives, "downward bets", financial regulations with balance sheets, TARP, bankruptcy, insolvency, liquidation or the role of the SEC or the Treasury. I'm intelligent, I just find this kind of talk a turn off. Skimming through those sections again I think the banking plot is fairly straightforward but the author has demonstrated his thorough knowledge of the sector and left me rather in the cold. I see that he has a financial sector background before he started to write which would explain his knowledge. I just wish he'd used the same light touch with the finance bits as he did with the secret service and Mike Byrne bits. He's much better at making the other subject areas I don't know much about accessible than with the banking stuff.
So. It could have been a 5 star book and if you have an interest in the economy, the financial sector and the grubby side of banking then it will appeal to you. But for me personally those parts alienated me to the point half way through the book I couldn't stand to read anymore. i want to know what happens and understand exactly why the set up happened - but I can't cope with one more passage of banking.