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Other People's Money
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About the Author

CHARLES V. BAGLI is a "New York Times" reporter who covers the intersection of politics and real estate. He has written about the sale of high-profile buildings, political contributions of the real estate industry, the battle to build atwo-billion-dollar stadium for the Jets, bid rigging in the construction industry, payoffs at the tax assessor's office, and a Sutton Place co-op that turned public land into a private park. He has worked for the "New York Observer," the "Daily Record" of Morristown, New Jersey, the "Tampa Tribune" and the "Brooklyn Phoenix." He lives with his wife in New Jersey. They have two daughters."

Reviews

"It's been said that journalism is the first draft of history, but with his upcoming book"Other People's Mone"y, "New York Times"reporter Charles Bagli writes the most authoritative account yet of the failed Stuyvesant Town-Peter Cooper Village deal and the housing crises that rocked the world." - "New York Observer"
The reader interested in New York real estate history, its moneyed elites, or even the self-contradictory aspects of social investment should find ample material for reflection and enjoyment in Bagli s account.
"Publishers Weekly"
Bagli's sourcing is impressive, and readers will welcome his ability to make arcane investment dealings comprehensible. "Kirkus"
"Other People s Money "delivers one of the great untold stories of the financial crisis how greed, arrogance, and the distorted incentives of the commercial real estate market helped drive our nation s economy off a cliff. Told through meticulous reporting of what was arguably the worst real estate deal of all time, in this vitally important book Bagli demonstrates how the well-heeled and well-connected walked away relatively unscathed from the wreckage that they created, leaving a devastated middle class holding the bag yet again.
Neil Barofsky, "New York Times" bestselling author of "Bailout: How Washington Abandoned Main Street While Rescuing Wall Street"
Charles Bagli does for the politics and economics of urban real estate finance what Jane Jacobs did for urban street life. Bagli s new book, "Other People s Money," uses the sale of a major housing complex on Manhattan s Lower East Side, Stuyvesant Town-Peter Cooper Village, to demonstrate how contemporary real estate speculators deploy international finance and local politics to change the housing options of more ordinary city dwellers. Bagli, a talented journalist, makes the street-level impacts of abstract global finance easily understood.
Elliott Sclar, professor of urban planning, Columbia University
"Other People s Money "is a terrific book. With remarkable textual clarity and a fine-tuned dramatic sensibility, Charles Bagli has recreated the extraordinarily high stakes poker game that was the largest real estate deal in U.S. history. His characters include the biggest real estate players on the planet as well as middle-class residents desperately holding on by their fingertips to the only housing they can afford. A truly epic tale, one that systematically demonstrates the logic (and illogic) of the real estate bubble that set the stage for worldwide recession and that reveals the wild, unforgiving nature of twenty-first-century capitalism. It s a powerful story and a great read.
Rick Fantasia, coauthor of "Hard Work: Remaking the American Labor Movement" and professor of sociology at Smith College [Charles Bagli] takes readers on a walk through history s biggest real-estate nightmare and lays out the facts in an even-handed, no-hysteria style. "Bloomberg.com""

""Other People's Money "delivers one of the great untold stories of the financial crisis--how greed, arrogance, and the distorted incentives of the commercial real estate market helped drive our nation's economy off a cliff. Told through meticulous reporting of what was arguably the worst real estate deal of all time, in this vitally important book Bagli demonstrates how the well-heeled and well-connected walked away relatively unscathed from the wreckage that they created, leaving a devastated middle class holding the bag yet again."
--Neil Barofsky, "New York"" Times" bestselling author of "Bailout: How Washington Abandoned Main Street While Rescuing Wall Street"
"Charles Bagli does for the politics and economics of urban real estate finance what Jane Jacobs did for urban street life. Bagli's new book, "Other People's Money," uses the sale of a major housing complex on Manhattan's Lower East Side, Stuyvesant Town-Peter Cooper Village, to demonstrate how contemporary real estate speculators deploy international finance and local politics to change the housing options of more ordinary city dwellers. Bagli, a talented journalist, makes the street-level impacts of abstract global finance easily understood."
--Elliott Sclar, professor of urban planning, Columbia University
""Other People's Money "is a terrific book. With remarkable textual clarity and a fine-tuned dramatic sensibility, Charles Bagli has recreated the extraordinarily high stakes poker game that was the largest real estate deal in U.S. history. His characters include the biggest real estate players on the planet as well as middle-class residents desperately holding on by their fingertips to the only housing they can afford. A truly epic tale, one that systematically demonstrates the logic (and illogic) of the real estate bubble that set the stage for worldwide recession and that reveals the wild, unforgiving nature of twenty-first-century capitalism. It's a powerful story and a gr

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