A Conspiracy of Paper: A Novel | 
enlarge | Author: David Liss Publisher: Random House Category: EBooks
List Price: $9.95 Buy New: $7.96 You Save: $1.99 (20%)

Rating: 185 reviews Sales Rank: 2962
Format: Kindle Book Media: Kindle Edition Edition: 1st Pages: 448
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6 ASIN: B000QCS93W
Publication Date: March 28, 2000 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Amazon.com Review A fool and his money are soon parted--and nowhere so quickly as in the stock market, it would seem. In David Liss's ambitious first novel, A Conspiracy of Paper, the year is 1719 and the place London, where human greed, apparently, operated then in much the same manner as it does today. Liss focuses his intricate tale of murder, money, and conspiracy on Benjamin Weaver, ex-boxer, self-described "protector, guardian, bailiff, constable-for-hire, and thief-taker," and son of a Portuguese Jewish "stock-jobber." Weaver's father, from whom he has been estranged, has recently died, the victim of a horse-drawn carriage hit and run. Though his uncle has suggested that the accident wasn't quite so accidental, Benjamin doesn't give the idea much credence: I blush to own I rewarded his efforts to seek my opinion with only a formal reply in which I dismissed his ideas as nonsensical. I did so in part because I did not wish to involve myself with my family and in part because I knew that my uncle, for reasons that eluded me, had loved my father and could not accept the senselessness of so random a death. But then Benjamin is hired by two different men to solve two seemingly unrelated cases. One client, Mr. Balfour, claims his own father's unexpected death "was made to look like self-murder so that a villain or villains could take his money with impunity," and even suggests there might be a link between Balfour senior's death and that of Weaver's father. His next customer is Sir Owen Nettleton, an aristocrat who is keen to recover some highly confidential papers that were stolen from him while he cavorted with a prostitute. Weaver takes on the first case with some reluctance, the second with more enthusiasm. In the end, both converge, leading him back to his family even as they take him deep into the underbelly of London's financial markets. Liss seems right at home in the world he's created, whether describing the company manners of wealthy Jewish merchants at home or the inner workings of Exchange Alley--the 18th-century version of Wall Street. His London is a dank and filthy place, almost lawless but for the scant protection offered by such rogues as Jonathan Wilde, the sinister head of a gang of thieves who profits by selling back to their owners items stolen by his own men. Though better connected socially, the investors involved with the shady South Sea Company have equally larcenous hearts, and Liss does an admirable job of leading the reader through the intricacies of stock trading, bond selling, and insider trading with as little fuss, muss, and confusion as possible. What really makes the book come alive, however, are the details of 18th-century life--from the boxing matches our hero once participated in to the coffee houses, gin joints, and brothels where he trolls for clues. And then there is the matter of Weaver's Jewishness, the prejudices of the society he lives in, and his struggle to come to terms with his own ethnicity. A Conspiracy of Paper weaves all these themes together in a manner reminiscent of the long, gossipy novels of Henry Fielding and Laurence Stern. Indeed, Liss manages to suggest the prose style of those authors while keeping his own, less convoluted style. This is one conspiracy guaranteed to succeed. --Alix Wilber
Product Description
THE HISTORICAL THRILLER OF THE YEAR
Benjamin Weaver is an outsider in eighteenth-century London: a Jew among Christians; a ruffian among aristocrats; a retired pugilist who, hired by London's gentry, travels through the criminal underworld in pursuit of debtors and thieves.
In A Conspiracy of Paper, Weaver investigates a crime of the most personal sort: the mysterious death of his estranged father, a notorious stockjobber. To find the answers, Weaver must contend with a desperate prostitute who knows too much about his past, relatives who remind him of his alienation from the Jewish faith, and a cabal of powerful men in the world of British finance who have hidden their business dealings behind an intricate web of deception and violence. Relying on brains and brawn, Weaver uncovers the beginnings of a strange new economic order based on stock speculation--a way of life that poses great risk for investors but real danger for Weaver and his family.
In the tradition of The Alienist and written with scholarly attention to period detail, A Conspiracy of Paper is one of the wittiest and most suspenseful historical novels in recent memory, as well as a perceptive and beguiling depiction of the origin of today's financial markets. In Benjamin Weaver, author David Liss has created an irresistibly appealing protagonist, one who parlays his knowledge of the emerging stock market into a new kind of detective work.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 180 more reviews...
A tale of murders, lies and money August 10, 2008 Rebecca Huston (On the Banks of the Hudson) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Think of a time where men and women, desperate to make money, buy and sell shares in companies, driving the value up; often borrowing money to further their ambitions, but where a single mishap can lead them into bankruptcy or worse. Think of a corrupt society, where marriage is mostly a sham, where affairs and adultery are winked at. Think of a culture where minorities, whether in race or religion or national origin, are careful to not draw too much attention to themselves lest there be a punishing backlash. The very wealthy spend their time in near idleness, politicians are hopelessly corrupt, and the vast majority spend their lives in trying to hold things together. America, the 2000's? Think rather, of England in the 1720's, and life is hovering on the edge of either glory or ruin, depending on luck. David Liss' novel, A Conspiracy of Paper takes the reader back to a time when speculation was everywhere, whether it was at a gaming table, in marriage or making money. Told in first person, we get to know the world of Benjamin Weaver very well. He is a Jew, but somewhat accepted by the British majority around him. Until an injury brought an end to his boxing career, he was known as 'The Lion of Judah;' now his life isn't quite as public, but the violence hasn't diminished much. Benjamin brings in various criminals to the court, or better yet, handles private, discreet inquiries. It provides him with a modest income, and as long as he doesn't have many extravagances, he does well. But when he is approached by Sir Owen, Ben Weaver finds himself entangled in a larger plot that he can begin to imagine. At first the assignment is simple enough -- retrieve a packet of letters from a woman named Kate Cole, letters that would prove to be very indiscreet if Sir Owen's intended, a young woman of wealth and sensibilities were to discover. A second commission, that of Mr. Balfour, is a bit more perilous -- discover who caused the death of his father, who hung himself after loosing an immense sum of money in stock investments. And here the tale makes a very personal twist. For it seems that to uncover it all, Benjamin must return to his family, from whom he has been long estranged, for his father also was murdered, and the crime remains unsolved. Back among his family, Benjamin meets the beautiful Miriam, his cousin's widow, and the more he discovers the more treacherous and dangerous the story turns, for at the center of it all lays the new creation of the stock market, where money can be made and lost in days... I have to say, this was a cracking good read. Author David Liss creates a very believable world here, and catches the uncertainty and menace beautifully. Much of the story is told through conversations, and the language of the time simply resonates, a time when being able to speak well, and elegantly was the sign of a gentleman. With the secondary characters, Liss does just as well as he does with Weaver. Elias, Ben's best friend, and aspiring playwright and mathematician is a delight to read about, and I couldn't help but chuckle over his obsession with letting blood. There's also his flirtatious landlady, forever trying to get some sort of gossipy story out of Benjamin. And the touches of Jewish lore and custom was spot on for the times, it was handled very well, and didn't have the mistakes that I usually come across when I read historical fiction, and someone decides to have a Jewish character or two in there. To balance out the higher end of society, there are also the dregs of London's underbelly. Jonathan Wild, an actual historical figure, is prominent in the story, and if his tale seems fantastical, it all really happened. Not only did he run gangs of theives and cutthroats, he had quite a stable of doxies as well -- and woe betide anyone who wasn't useful, as we see in the story. At the very center is the story of the South Seas Company, and the beginings of what we know as the stock market today. Every now and then, Liss shows us how the system worked, and I was both enthralled and chilled by the similarities to our own world today. I won't reveal here just what happened to the South Seas Company, but it was quite a shocker at the time. There is an author's note at the end, explaining some of the more obscure points of the story, and an interview between himself and author Sheri Holman that is fascinating to read. There are also a selection of questions for readers groups to try out. Finishing it all up is an excerpt from David Liss' followup to this, called A Spectacle of Corruption, which continues the story of Benjamin Weaver. This was a great, thoughtful as well as exciting read. Fans of historical fiction that is based in fact should enjoy this one, and mixed in with the talk of money and philosophy, there are scenes of housebreaking, swordplay, the horrors of prison and a seldom seen view of a society not so far away from out own. Five solid stars. I intend to find more of this novelist's work, it's worth it.
I'm no longer allowed to choose books for my book club July 9, 2008 C. Jones (Southern California) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
I picked this book for my book club and now am black-listed from that position for the foreseeable future. I got the furtherest into it, 300+ pages, out of sheer guilt for picking it but it was a hard 300 pages. It was promoted as an "enthralling historical thriller" but ended up being a tiresome bore. At the very least I was hoping to learn something about 18th century London but I didn't like the main character, Benjamin Weaver, wasn't interested in stock-jobbery (a subject that was interjected at every turn, bringing any possible flow of action to screeching halt), and in the end didn't care Who Did It. Now I'm relegated to dessert detail for book club. Thanks a lot.
Believable intrigue set in world's first stock market June 25, 2008 Daniel Berger (Atlanta, GA USA) At its heart it's a private eye novel set in the early 18th century run-up to the South Sea Company bubble, the first stock market crash. But the novel is also far more. Benjamin Weaver is a former boxing champion and sometime ruffian now making a more honest, if occasionally seamy living, recovering stolen goods in lawless London and taking on other work where a tough and discreet man might be needed. Also a lapsed Jew, he is alienated from his more observant family. He is drawn into investigating two recent deaths including that of his own father, a player in the freewheeling stock market, to whom Benjamin had not spoken for the last ten years. Weaver's father had been hit by a coach, and the other man had committed suicide. Is there more than meets the eye? The more Weaver digs, the more it seems so. Weaver finds many leads pointing to the South Sea Company and its rival, the more established Bank of England, which both make fortunes dealing in government bonds. He reconciles with his uncle, Miguel Lienzo, and reacquaints himself with the Jewish community he had left. He also becomes enamored of Lienzo's son's widow, the beautiful Miriam. Weaver crosses paths, as well as swords, with wealthy and powerful men, a delicate task for a Jew. He also runs afoul of Jonathan Wild, the boss of London's underworld. As his investigation threatens to shake England's financial foundation, Weaver finds his own life in jeopardy. The book has good detail, particularly on England's Jews of that period, Sephardic by way of Amsterdam. It also has good period-consistent language without getting pedantic. You don't need a glossary to read it. Liss creates a believable 18th century Jewish boxer, estranged from his own people and making a living on his own while never able to forget - nor in his heart of hearts, wanting to - that he's Jewish. And he mostly avoids planting 21st century ideas inside the head of an 18th century man.
Debut novel is entertaining but not very memorable January 8, 2008 Andres C. Salama (Buenos Aires, Argentina) I read this debut novel by David Liss - a historical novel set in the London of the early 1700s, and dealing with a number of con games setting on the then nascent stock exchange - some years ago, not knowing anything about the writer. The book is a fast read, despite not being a short book at all, and it's quite entertaining. But you are not likely to remember a lot about it after a while - it's exciting to read, well researched, but not very memorable.
british society...interesting... December 14, 2007 T. Sutherland (Denver, Colorado United States) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
a fun mystery in 1870's London..no rampant sex scenes. no filthy language..just a lot of fun
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