Rating:  Summary: Fantastic from Start to Finish! Review: I haven't read a book this good for ages. It took me back to the early Ludlum. Great characters and neat settings. Maybe a little too long, but so what, the payoff was great! Exciting!!
Rating:  Summary: Drab and awful Review: If characters are going to be 'tough' shouldn't they at least be sassy and tough? If the style is meant to be factual and gritty, shouldn't the characters talk just a little bit like people do in real life? Shouldn't a writer of a full-length novel be capable of evocative, inventive language SOMEWHERE? Reich obviously doesn't think so, and the result is a very plodding, dull read indeed. After 200 pages I was on my knees with dismay and frustration. Please, editors, raise the standards of writing you demand or someone somewhere will sue you for mental torture...
Rating:  Summary: could have been better Review: At the beginning the story is riveting, however during the second half of the book, there are many twists not too credible at all, "the hero is like superman" figthing thugs, which makes the end somewhat disappointing
Rating:  Summary: Astonishingly awful writing Review: I bough this in haste, expecting a considered, perhaps rather clever financial thriller. What I found was the kind of mind-numbingly atrocious writing I thought had long since died out. I'm amazed the publishers let Mr Reich get away with it. It only shows what idiots they must think thriller buyers are....
Rating:  Summary: True to its Reviews Review: I find the value of one liners plastered on book covers to be a dime-a-dozen, especially with NYT Bestsellers. However, I found Numbered Account to be worth its weight in words. I quickly became addicted and found myself unable to put it down. Thanks Mr. Reich for restoring my faith in one line reviews.
Rating:  Summary: Unintentionally funny prose, but not bad overall Review: The cruelest way to review this novel would simply be to quote from its first half, which contains such howlers (listed by category) as: 1. Purple prose: "And her body took him to realms he had never before discovered." (P. 127.) "She danced with the fury of a caged panther, and when the music demanded that she 'walk this way,' her responding strut fired a bolt of hormonal lightning through his loins. Watching her remove the leather brassiere that supported her generous breasts, his mouth turned dry as the Gobi." (P. 321.) 2. Needless rhetorical questions: "No one had pushed him into the path of the tram. Then why could he still feel the imprint of another person's palm scalding his lower back?" (P. 3.) "They regarded themselves as the chosen ones, and in fact, they were. Financial centurions for the new millennium. [¶] Why then did he hate them so?" (P. 49.) 3. Clichéed or clumsy writing: "The morning fog, which during winter loitered on the Swiss plateau like an unwelcome houseguest, had at 11:45 a.m. Friday not yet lifted." (P. 163.) "And then he knew. Power. Vision. Scope." (P. 263.) "She looked into the mirror a long time. Trust. Dedication. Effort." (P. 276.) "[I]t was not long before his mind wandered back to the dilemma that pressed on his heart like a sharpened dagger." (Pp. 222-23.) Still, if you can overlook these examples and other bad writing, a rather predictable plot, and the stock characters, the novel is entertaining enough. And it contains one quite funny scene, in which a villain desperate to obtain a Swiss passport from a corrupt official is nevertheless subjected to the indignity of a series of officious questions. If you need to put your mind on autopilot for a 14-hour flight from San Francisco to Sydney, "Numbered Account," at 753 easily read pages, will fill the bill.
Rating:  Summary: Does This Tale Really Require Suspension of Belief? Review: While we would like to assume that Swiss Bankers are honest, dignified folk, they have not fared well in the past year's news. Thus I had little difficulty in getting wrapped up in Mr. Reich's interesting plot. This novel involves high finance, yet the details of the banking world never encroach on the thriller aspect of the book. Do drug dealers have influence in the banking world? Why not? Our politicians are easily bought by reprehensible lobbying groups. I assume there are greedy, unsavory people in all walks of life. Can a former Marine lieutenant take on an enormously wealthy Mid-Eastern heroin exporter? You betcha he can. Read the book, and find out the details.
Rating:  Summary: Great summer read! Review: This book caught my attention from page one. It was fast paced with many plot twists and turns. And I loved the ending. Great first novel and I'll look for more by Mr. Reich!
Rating:  Summary: Definitely a page turner... Review: I picked this book up in the airport, and was thrilled to find that it was both fun to read and somewhat intellectually stimulating. If you think banking is at all interesting, then this is a great story for you. It certainly prompts one to think about the extensive corruption in the world of finance! I admire the author's pacing and character development -- he has an excellent sense of timing and all of the people in this book are compellingly composed. But toward the end, I felt like Reich sold out or just hurried too much toward the climax. The plot took one too many turns, and ended up being implausible and overly complicated. This was a disappointment, but the book was still a great escape and a worthwhile read. Great for a plane trip!
Rating:  Summary: Awful formula effort on pretty dull subject Review: There are pretty few purely financial thrillers around, and they generally do well. This must explain the fuss that has been made by the publishers over this otherwise corny, cardboard effort. Just because your characters are rich and move a lot of money around doesn't make them interesting; and none of these guys come over as more than cyphers. The detail on finance may be all be true, but that only serves to make the plot itself all the more unbelievable and silly. I was hoping this book would entertain me over a long journey, but after 300 pages of grinding my teeth I couldn't stomach it any longer.
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