Pure enjoyment, superbly well written with that combination of self-deprecation, sophistication and humor which represents the best of English writing.
Felix Hart is Head of Wines at the UK's largest supermarket chain, which allows him to travel the globe on his nose for great wine and experience, even becoming one of the super-sophisticated Wine Minstrels (a secret guild of wine connoisseurs). That is, until his half-witted CEO moves him to becoming head for toilet bowl fixtures and one of the world's largest wine corporations engages him to investigate fake rare wines coming out of China.
The principle thesis: can a high tech, AI loaded 3-D printing analog chemical production and blending "machine" produce wines that are indistinguishable from the real thing? In other words, can China finally produce wines as good as the top French vintners, all by a "computer"?
Into this breach, only partly briefed, must go Felix Hart as some kind of James Bond for the proud vintners of the world. And true to form with witty Brit books, in spite of himself, Felix manages to muddle through and, with several abrupt and witty turns, brilliantly defrocks a conspiracy of Chinese power and bogus VC backed technologies like Theranos. And all with hilarity and sophistication of someone who has gone to the various Chinese industrial parks and glitzy hotels which make up Shanghai and other large Chinese cities, and who understands the borderline reality between Chinese companies and western finance, here are a few extracted quotes (I could have provided oodles more):
"I spotted a sign helpfully pointing the way in both English and Chinese, to the 'Artificial Christmas Tree Zone", another to the 'Garden Accessories and Tiny Statues Zone', Every hundred yards, we passed a factory entrance guarded by a metal gate and a ten-foot perimeter wall displaying the name of the company in English and Chinese ; Zhenbei Best Hotel Furniture Co. Ltd., Pengda Toothbrush and Scrubbing Co. Ltd, Qiandeng Nozzle and Suction Co. Ltd." Perfect.
Describing his state of mind after trying to sleep after arriving from the long flight to China: "I finally dropped off after subjecting myself to a CNN documentary on female entrepreneurship in Saudi Arabia, and when my alarm sounded at seven a.m., I felt like a drugged bear hauled form the depths of a mid-winter hibernation." Yep, been there..
Nor are all the bad guys in China seeking to ensure the success of an IPO despite the failure of the machine in question (more accurately described than passive investors would like); no, the ugly whiff of selfish politics and willingness to frame innocents extend to the UK as well.
With a happy ending somehow appearing nevertheless, I felt this book was completely enjoyable and am happily looking for others in the series.