I’d just finished reading 79 Park Avenue, which I absolutely loved (a rare 5 stars from me) so went straight into Tycoon after finishing that.
I read it over three days on holiday as, at 432 pages, it is fairly lengthy. Although a good page turner it did feel long in parts. For me the pace picked up better in the second half.
It definitely falls into the category of ‘shock fiction’ in a similar way to Jacquelin Susann. Tycoon portrays lavish lifestyles set against a constant backdrop of material wealth, sex and scandals.
The book is set predominantly in 1930s-1960s America. It follows Jack Lear and his family, friends and acquaintances from when he graduates Harvard through development of Jack’s media empire, personal relationships and journey through high society over the next 30-40 years.
I find this period in America fascinating and Robbins writes about it vividly and with great detail. I found the competition in the media industry during the rapid development of TV, Radio and Film and the New England ‘Old Money’ vs California ‘New Money’ struggle fascinating.
Robbins writes about the personal relationships, scandals and backstabbing between characters in vivid Technicolor. Tycoon was very graphic with a lot of swearing, strong sex scenes etc which didn’t offend me but a lot seemed purely for shock value. It started out graphic from the start and I felt as though he was trying to continually raise the stakes through the book which, when coming towards the end of the book, left him with nowhere to go.
I found most characters (there are many... you could have a family tree appendix!) interesting but not likeable. From Jack’s first wife, the Boston debutante Kimberly, to the gossip column writer there was a broad range of personalities in the pages. I didn’t really find one character to root for with perhaps the exception being Joni, Jack’s model turned actress daughter. But maybe that’s the point?
I recommend reading Tycoon if you’re already a fan of Robbins or writers like Jacquelin Susann. You certainly won’t be bored reading it lying on a sun lounger. If easily offended I’d give it a wide berth!