Katherine Clarkeis a reporter at The Wall Street Journal,where she covers the high-end real estate market across the United States. Previously, she wrote for theNew York Daily News and The Real Deal.
“Some years hence, anthropologists or aliens will look to a
half-dozen spindly towers that rise improbably high above the
southern edge of New York’s Central Park when trying to understand
this particular age of hyper-wealth. In the meantime, the rest of
us can consult Billionaires’ Row, Katherine Clarke’s thrilling
chronicle of those towers and the people who built them.”—Financial
Times
“Based upon extensive accounts from New York’s power brokers, this
fast-paced narrative cracks open the cutthroat world of $100
million apartments for the global one-percenters.”—Robb Report
“A rollicking account . . . The Wild West has nothing on the cowboy
builders, bankers, and buyers who populate Clarke’s tale. . . .
Engrossing.”—Air Mail
“Katherine Clarke knows the world of real estate down to the
ground—indeed, down to the bedrock! But she carries that knowledge
lightly as she describes the swashbuckling egos, the daredevil
deals, and the tsunami of wealth that are imposing skyline-shaping
changes on one of the world’s most iconic cities. I loved this
book.”—Diana B. Henriques, bestselling author of The Wizard of
Lies
“A necessary book about how not to build a city . . . Katherine
Clarke has the rare ability to make you understand both the
personalities and the numbers behind our modern Towers of Babel
along 57th Street; the result is a coolly devastating portrait of
the game of greed and ego that has permanently scarred the
skyline—and the psyche—of New York.”—Thomas Dyja, author of New
York, New York, New York
“Thrilling, incisive, and a lot of fun to read.”—Eliot Brown,
bestselling co-author of The Cult of We
“A captivating portrait of the powerful mix of ego, money, and
competition that—a century after the construction of the Empire
State and Chrysler buildings—continues to transform the city’s
skyline.”—Kate Ascher, professor, Columbia University, and author
of The Heights
“This book is a study of how wealth and ambition trump all when it
comes to the Big Apple.”—Julie Satow, author of The Plaza
“To rewrite Oscar Wilde, even as high as the stars, you’re barely
out of the gutter.”—Michael Gross, bestselling author of 740 Park
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