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Book Review: The Hazards of Good Fortune

Jonathan Margolis finds Seth Greenland's The Hazards of Good Fortune is too good to be a movie

September 12, 2018 08:22
AR-308029992
2 min read

I am not sure if sixth-time novelist Seth Greenland set out to write an Obama-era version of The Bonfire of the Vanities, the WASP Wall Street characters replaced by equally rich but culturally very different Jewish New Yorkers, the plot complicated (as any modern version of a classic has to be) by technology.

But the points of congruence with Tom Wolfe’s 1980s saga are so numerous, a re-imagining of Wolfe must surely have been in Greenland’s mind — a hyper-wealthy protagonist, an infidelity, a car accident in ambiguous circumstances involving a young black pedestrian, a District Attorney with political ambitions, a stellar career and reputation utterly, wincingly shredded to the point where you feel a bit, but not very, sympathetic, for him.

But not only is Greenland up to the task of being the new Wolfe. I think he might actually be better. The Hazards of Good Fortune is a slab of a book and I am a slow reader, but it consumed a couple of recent weeks of aeroplane journeys and nights in hotels.

Larry David, no less, commends it as a page-turner and it totally is. The plotting, the twists, the toying with your emotions are all exemplary.