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John Putnam Thatcher #24

A Shark Out of Water

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Intrepid Wall Street banker John Putnam Thatcher finds himself embroiled in a white-collar scandal involving a quasi-government commission planning to modernize the Kiel Canal, the link between the North and Baltic Seas

328 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published November 1, 1997

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About the author

Emma Lathen

41 books22 followers
Aka R.B. Dominic

Emma Lathen is the pen name of two American businesswomen: an attorney Mary Jane Latsis (July 12, 1927 -October 29, 1997) and an economic analyst Martha Henissart (b. 1929),who received her B.A. in physics from Mount Holyoke College in 1950.

http://www.nytimes.com/1997/10/31/boo...

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5 stars
21 (18%)
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57 (49%)
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30 (25%)
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Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Emmanuel Gustin.
412 reviews25 followers
December 31, 2016
While this book keeps you reading, I was a bit disappointed by it. I guess because the usual witty deconstruction is absent, thus leaving the reader with a plot driven by characters who are not very well developed. We are even presented with a mystery in the personality of the (first) murder victim, which seems to be strangely split, but this is never resolved or pursued. Only Everett Gabler truly provides an entertaining note.

That said, the plot is intelligent, with characters trundling around a massive red herring created by an intelligent and unscrupulous murderer. Perhaps precisely for that reason, its final unravelling is a bit too sudden.
Profile Image for John Marr.
503 reviews16 followers
May 8, 2017
Surprisingly mediocre read marked with a thin plot, poorly developed characters and a protagonist that really doesn't do much and is almost a footnote character. Never having read Lathen, I can only speculate that I can only speculate that one of the collaborators behind the Emma Lathen pseudonym sat this one out (she died around the time the book came out). And one kvetch: the real life "Great Salad Oil Swindle" cited in the book had nothing to do with Billy Sol Estes. Mr. Estes specialized in more complicated frauds involving anhydrous ammonia tanks and cotton allotments.

Perhaps the lesson here is never start a series at the wrong end.
456 reviews2 followers
March 10, 2020
Always good to see what John Thatcher and his colleagues, especially Everett Gabler, are up to. This story doesn’t have the same gripping suspense of several of her others, however. I would have been more surprised by the villain if he hadn’t been someone I disliked from the start.

One feature I found interesting was the snapshot of Poland in the middle of its transition to the West. When I first read the book, we saw the Visegrad nations on a fairly well defined path - NATO, EU, democracy. Then I nodded and said, “Yes, that’s happening” to myself. Given where both Poland and Hungary find themselves today, it is sad to look back at that scene of vision, hope, and promise.
Profile Image for Susan.
574 reviews
February 16, 2018
I enjoyed this excellent series over the years, so it’s a little sad that this last (probably) adventure for banker / sleuth John Thatcher is subpar. The most fun was always the interplay among him and his colleagues, but this book only includes the wonderful Everett Gabler.
As always, however, we’re treated to the elegant, almost Austenesque language of Emma Lathen. She does have a way with words.
Profile Image for Joy.
1,409 reviews23 followers
December 1, 2018
John Thatcher gets caught up in the complications of a shipping disaster followed by the murder of the chief of staff who oversees eastern European shipping. Emma Lathen is back to creating the vivid personalities of business people and their hidden motivations.

Read 2 times
Profile Image for Carl Brookins.
Author 26 books79 followers
May 24, 2013

Since her first in 1961, Emma Lathen, a pair of excellent writers, has written a number of novels that deal with the financial workings of Wall Street. The principal character in over 20 books is widower John Putnam Thatcher, now CEO of the Sloan Guarantee Trust, a staid, conservative commercial bank in New York. It may sound like a chancy idea, to base a series on the world of high finance without throwing in lots of sex and bizarre goings on. It is testament to the genius and the rectitude of the author that such easy solutions are nowhere present. Lathen has always made this sometimes arcane world mesmerizing and understandable.

All is consistent in this latest entry in the series. The characters are strong, fascinating, unusual, and the plot of this novel, is never out of sight. Set in the murky, shifting world of small emerging European nations after the fall of the Soviet Empire, we follow Thatcher into an interesting opportunity for investment by the Sloan in the seedy, dark, port of Gdansk, Poland. Pressure is building to enlarge an important German canal that connects the Baltic to the North Sea.

But all is not as it seems and Thatcher must weave his way through murder, political and commercial chicanery, and the evil that big business sometimes generates. Readers will be drawn inexorably into the sometimes dour, sometimes opulent machinations of the principal players. The story begins in deadly fog with a visceral, irresistible rush, and it doesn’t let go until the very end. A fine, fine novel.
Profile Image for Lisa Kucharski.
1,056 reviews
October 19, 2012
I have read all but two of the earlier books in this series. Primarily cause it is always sad to finish off a series (this one was finished the year of Mary Jane Latsis' death and she was one of the two authors.)

This one, takes us overseas to Gdansk Poland, which means an extra interesting way to learn about various cultures and situations. The murders in this story are sad, though the first was not surprising. The reflective ending of Thatcher was interesting. Made you ponder how many more really fascinating tales these ladies had stored inside them. In the book Oblonski, the police detective, asks Thatcher and another how they don't get fooled in banking... and they say, They never believe anything they hear or read. The policeman laughs and tells them, they are actually like the police themselves.

And in this story, seeing with your own eyes, is very very important. :)

447 reviews3 followers
August 1, 2010
I enjoy Emma Lathen's books with the banker John Putnam Thatcher. There are no car chases, not a lot of violence. He solves the murder(s) by logic, by figuring out what had to have happened. They are a little outdated. Usually the businessmen are all male, although this one did have a powerful female character. This book was written in 1997, but I think a businessman such as John Thatcher would have had a cell phone or there should be an explananation about why he refuses to carry one.

In this book, John Thatcher has to go to Poland to deal with his banks interests and gets involved with the chaos caused by snarled canal traffic and the ensuing murder.
Profile Image for Vicki Cline.
779 reviews45 followers
September 9, 2012
This is the 24th, and presumably last, book in the Thatcher mystery series. Unfortunately it's not one of the best ones, taking place in Poland and Germany not long after the opening up of Eastern Europe. A zealous bureaucrat is killed when he discovers irregularities in shipping in the Baltic. I generally don't enjoy the books set in foreign lands - the domestic ones seem more interesting. I wish she was still writing. I'd love to read her take on Credit Default Swaps and Collateralized Debt Obligations. Hopefully the Sloan Bank would have steered clear of questionable practices.
Profile Image for Robert.
397 reviews38 followers
July 24, 2008
After more than 30 years of writing this series, the authors continue to maintain a fresh prespective and engaging humor. The characters are interesting, especially those who are added with each adventure. I believe this is the last book in the series and I am very sorry to think so.
Profile Image for Nancy.
244 reviews2 followers
February 25, 2011
I read this whole series of books some years ago and liked them. It was interesting to go back and read this one.....the banking and investment banking businesses have changed so much over the years that the book seemed dated. I still liked it, but I think there are better books in the series.
5,305 reviews62 followers
May 6, 2016
#24 in the John Putnam Thatcher series. Finale of estimable series featuring a banker.

John Putnam Thatcher mystery - Gdansk, Poland and Kiel, Germany are the settings for problems at the Kiel Canal and murder within the Baltic Area Development Association.
Profile Image for Laura.
146 reviews
March 5, 2013
I'm a big Emma Lathen fan, but this is not one of the best. Not bad, mind you, and much better than many a mystery out there. Just not up to the usual JP Thatcher standard.
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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