Fortune's Spear

A Forgotten Story of Genius, Fraud, and Finance in the Roaring Twenties

Nonfiction, History, British, Social & Cultural Studies, True Crime, Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Fortune's Spear by Martin Vander Weyer, Skyhorse Publishing
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Martin Vander Weyer ISBN: 9781628739077
Publisher: Skyhorse Publishing Publication: February 4, 2014
Imprint: Skyhorse Publishing Language: English
Author: Martin Vander Weyer
ISBN: 9781628739077
Publisher: Skyhorse Publishing
Publication: February 4, 2014
Imprint: Skyhorse Publishing
Language: English

Gerard Lee Bevan had it all—and lost it all: An epic true account of greed, deception, and one scoundrel’s rise and fall.
 
Gerard Lee Bevan was the epitome of an old-school, well-moneyed character of the 1920s—arrogant, smooth, and highly cultured. Using a seemingly bottomless well of personal charm, he married into money and influence, and was to all appearances the very model of a self-made man.
 
But in truth, he was a liar and manipulator of the highest order, exploiting a glittering range of social connections as the black sheep of one of London’s most respectable banking families, while lavishing gifts on his numerous adulterous conquests in a deluge of self-indulgence.
 
Bevan could not uphold his many deceptions, however. He had a long run of success, but ended up perpetrating a massive fraud, which brought down the once-great City Equitable Insurance Company as well as his own stockbroking firm, Ellis & Co. In 1922, Bevan fled England in ruin, abandoning his family and business, and was eventually caught in Vienna, despite his desperate attempts at disguise. His sensational Old Bailey trial would shock all of England and the world.
 
Fortune’s Spear is a parable of the how the prospect of easy money can draw risk-takers of every time period into a spiral of greed and deceit. In this richly detailed post-Edwardian tale of white-collar crime, Martin Vander Weyer shines a light on a fascinating bygone era, which mirrors our own contemporary financial debacles with disturbing similarity.

Fortune’s Spear is not exactly a century-old version of The Wolf of Wall Street but will have a familiar ring to followers of today’s financial chicaneries.” —The Wall Street Journal

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Gerard Lee Bevan had it all—and lost it all: An epic true account of greed, deception, and one scoundrel’s rise and fall.
 
Gerard Lee Bevan was the epitome of an old-school, well-moneyed character of the 1920s—arrogant, smooth, and highly cultured. Using a seemingly bottomless well of personal charm, he married into money and influence, and was to all appearances the very model of a self-made man.
 
But in truth, he was a liar and manipulator of the highest order, exploiting a glittering range of social connections as the black sheep of one of London’s most respectable banking families, while lavishing gifts on his numerous adulterous conquests in a deluge of self-indulgence.
 
Bevan could not uphold his many deceptions, however. He had a long run of success, but ended up perpetrating a massive fraud, which brought down the once-great City Equitable Insurance Company as well as his own stockbroking firm, Ellis & Co. In 1922, Bevan fled England in ruin, abandoning his family and business, and was eventually caught in Vienna, despite his desperate attempts at disguise. His sensational Old Bailey trial would shock all of England and the world.
 
Fortune’s Spear is a parable of the how the prospect of easy money can draw risk-takers of every time period into a spiral of greed and deceit. In this richly detailed post-Edwardian tale of white-collar crime, Martin Vander Weyer shines a light on a fascinating bygone era, which mirrors our own contemporary financial debacles with disturbing similarity.

Fortune’s Spear is not exactly a century-old version of The Wolf of Wall Street but will have a familiar ring to followers of today’s financial chicaneries.” —The Wall Street Journal

More books from Skyhorse Publishing

Cover of the book What Liberals Believe by Martin Vander Weyer
Cover of the book The Memoirs of Field-Marshal Kesselring by Martin Vander Weyer
Cover of the book On Leadership by Martin Vander Weyer
Cover of the book Fire in the Heart by Martin Vander Weyer
Cover of the book Unspeakable Horror by Martin Vander Weyer
Cover of the book Strange and Obscure Stories of New York City by Martin Vander Weyer
Cover of the book Bodie on the Road by Martin Vander Weyer
Cover of the book Backyard Medicine for All by Martin Vander Weyer
Cover of the book A Floating Life by Martin Vander Weyer
Cover of the book The Path by Martin Vander Weyer
Cover of the book The President Is Dead! by Martin Vander Weyer
Cover of the book Soldier, Spy, Heroine by Martin Vander Weyer
Cover of the book Doing Time by Martin Vander Weyer
Cover of the book Nightcap at Dawn by Martin Vander Weyer
Cover of the book Francis Bacon by Martin Vander Weyer
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy