Big business, corporate treachery, adultery and surprises
Financial Chicanery, back biting, corporate greed, insider trading and treachery seem unlikely ingredients for a book that starts with easy going Roy Groves, a happily married newly redundant senior manager, searching for a job and finding a fairly unexciting post and taking it as a stopgap. But as Roy makes friends at his new job he discovers that all is not as it seems, especially when the pleasant status quo in the company is shot to pieces when the popular director is replaced by someone who is an out-and-out card-carrying bastard. Despite Roy and his friends' and colleagues' best efforts, trouble starts in a big way. There are plenty of characters to like and several you can hate. The plot revolves chiefly around decision making: whether to take a gamble, whether to risk your all, or whether to settle for dull security. And this gamble is something that can make or break their lives.
There are romantic assignations, very dirty office politics, sub plots and twists, and each of the characters comes vividly alive on the page. The thrice divorced matey joker, with an eye for the ladies, the decent guy (with an equally decent wife) whose desire for wealth is to share with others, the Irish chancer who sails too close to the wind, the lovable American woman boss, and the sexy office siren, who cannot help beguiling unsuspecting males.
I know nothing about business acquisitions and takeovers, or how large corporations operate, and for that reason alone I found it interesting to learn the ins and outs of these things, which the author obviously has an expert knowledge of. But really it’s on a human level that this book scores, the personalities of the protagonists who make things happen, for good or ill, their triumphs, strengths and weaknesses, loyalties and failures. The book keeps you gripped because you genuinely have no idea what’s going to happen from one page to the next, and, crucially, you really want to know. It’s only too easy to believe that tough unscrupulous powerful people can stoop to such vicious tricks to get their way, and all the underhand tricks they play on their unsuspecting victims have the ring of truth. All in all, what makes it an exciting book is the notion of nice likeable people taking a huge gamble, with the cards stacked heavily against them. Does their gamble pay off? You’ll have to read the book to find out. I promise you it’s worth it.