Snatch 2&20: A Satirical Romp through the Wall Street and Silicon Valley Swamps by
Luke E. Fellows
My rating:
4 of 5 stars
I was hovering between awarding 3 or 4 stars for this book. When I looked back, I realised that in the first sitting I'd read nearly half of the book, so I was clearly very engaged. Hence the 4 stars.
Rather like the Roger Crane play "The Last Confession", this book forces one to confront what happens within a well known institution, whilst secretly hoping that it's not as bad as it's being painted, even while suspecting that it really is.
I like the fact that the author doesn't attempt to justify his lifestyle and openly admits his character flaws. None of what goes on is presented in a sensationalist way. The sexual practices (some may say excesses) and (what some may consider dodgy) business practices are simply presented as facts.
The only criticisms I have are that there are many TLAs (Two/Three Letter Acronyms) which it would be nice to have expanded on first use, the heavy use of industry jargon and the occasionally over-long (IMO) descriptions of scenes, the extensive use of Latin (I'm so glad that Google real-time image translate exists) and many obscure words where other more common ones would do. Regarding the last criticism, it rather felt like the author was showing off.
I've just noticed that the criticism paragraph is longer that all the others! Please do not take that the wrong way. I awarded 4 stars because I really did enjoy the book and was sorry when it came to an end.
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