The Harry Bogen Novels
(2018)

Fiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Open Road Media, 2018
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781504056540 (electronic bk.) MWT12241712, 150405654X (electronic bk.) 12241712
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Meet one of the most unscrupulous businessmen in American literature-from a New York Times-bestselling novelist and Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright. Set in Manhattan's garment district, Jerome Weidman's debut novel, I Can Get It for You Wholesale, was a scathing satire of capitalist greed as personified by the shameless scoundrel Harry Bogen. As relevant today as when they were first published in the 1930s, both novels are now available in a single volume, featuring a foreword by Alistair Cooke. I Can Get It for You Wholesale: The stage for this savagely comic novel is Manhattan's cutthroat garment district, where six thousand manufacturers of dresses are crammed into a few blocks. Their factories are cramped, noisy, and incredibly profitable-and Harry Bogen is going to take them for all they're worth. A classic conniver, he knows that it's easier, and a hell of a lot more fun, to turn a buck by lying than by telling the truth. First he convinces the shipping clerks-the pack animals of the garment industry-to go on strike. With the dress manufacturers brought to their knees, Harry will be there to pick them up again. His conscience might be conflicted, if he had one in the first place. What's in It for Me?: In this sharp-witted sequel, Harry Bogen is again up to his old tricks. After Harry built his empire and became king of the garment district, he blew it up, leaving his partners in jail and securing the whole of the fortune for himself. It takes only three months for Harry to find that retirement does not suit him. His latest scheme starts with an order for one thousand dresses, bought at cut-rate price from a vendor who can't afford not to sell. From there, Harry raises the stakes, juggling deals and spinning stories as fast as he possibly can. Will he secure himself fortune everlasting, or will this Napoleon meet his Waterloo?

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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