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Fortune's Spear
Fortune's Spear

Fortune's Spear

The Story of the Blue-Blooded Rogue Behind the Most Notorious City Scandal of the 1920s

TRUE CRIME

368 Pages, 6 x 9

Cloth, $29.95 (US $29.95) (CA $32.95)

Publication Date: January 2012

ISBN 9781907642319

Rights: US & CA

Elliott & Thompson (Jan 2012)

Sorry, this item is temporarily out of stock
 

Overview

A richly detailed Edwardian true crime story of an extraordinary fraud, full of parallels to contemporary financial upheavals, from Bernie Madoff to the 2008 global financial crash

A richly detailed Edwardian true crime story of an extraordinary fraud, full of parallels to contemporary financial upheavals, from Bernie Madoff to the 2008 global financial crash

 

Gerard Lee Bevan was the black sheep of one of London's most respectable banking families. A high-living womanizer and upper-class shyster of almost pantomime proportions, he exploited a glittering range of social connections. After a long run of success in City dealings he perpetrated a massive fraud which ruined both the City Equitable Fire Insurance Company and his stockbroking firm, Ellis & Co. He fled the country and was eventually arrested, tried, and jailed. Based on new research, Martin Vader Weyer tells the story of a fraud of extraordinary proportions, perpetrated by an aristocratic Englishman from a seemingly impeccable background. Exploring exactly how Bevan managed it, he reconstructs in rich Edwardian detail the environment and characters of the day, as well as Bevan's desperate attempt at disguise and flight across Europe. With resonances in today's financial world, from the 2008 crash to the likes of fraudsters such as Bernard Madoff, this compelling true crime tale offers a fascinating glimpse into a bygone financial world.

Reviews

"Backed by exceptional research, this is an intriguing read on financial history and reform in the early days of the 20th century from a very British perspective."
Library Journal Xpress Reviews

Author Biography

Martin Vander Weyer is the business editor of the Spectator, the founding editor of Spectator Business, and a regular contributor to the Daily Telegraph, Mail on Sunday, and other national newspapers.