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The Romantics by Galt Niederhoffer (English) Paperback Book

Description: The Romantics by Galt Niederhoffer Originally published: New York: St. Martins Press, 2008. FORMAT Paperback LANGUAGE English CONDITION Brand New Publisher Description Galt Niederhoffers The Romantics nimbly follows the shifting allegiances among an unforgettable set of characters, with a powerful, bittersweet romance at its heart, now a major motion picture starring Katie Holmes, Josh Duhamel, and Anna Paquin. Laura and Lila were college roommates--one brooding and Jewish, the other the epitome of golden WASP-dom. Now its ten years later, a day before Lilas wedding to Lauras former boyfriend, and as the guests arrive, Laura finds herself the only one not coupled up. Struggling with the traditionally thankless role of maid of honor, Laura realizes for the first time why she cant stop thinking about her long, tangled relationship with the groom. And it appears that he is not entirely ready for the altar himself. Flap Until now, readers seeking a working knowledge of high yield munis had two options: they could wade through the rare general reference on the municipal bond markets in hopes of chancing upon the stray nugget or two of useful investing information; or they could take their chances with the superficial coverage provided by the typical do-it-yourself bond guide. Enter Investing in the High Yield Municipal Market . The first and only book devoted exclusively to the subject, it provides investors with the kind of practical, insider information they need to prosper from this little-understood, highly profitable corner of the fixed-income world. Few authors are as uniquely qualified as Triet Nguyen to write such a book. He is a thirty-year veteran of the fixed-income markets, during which he witnessed the creation of the modern high yield tax-exempt institutional market. Writing from firsthand experience, he chronicles the markets evolution, while providing a gold mine of useful information on its historical performance, and also: Develops a conceptual framework for high yield, tax-free investing that factors in both interest rate and credit cycles Reviews the latest historical data on municipal defaults, including, for the first time, the non-rated sector Frankly assesses the pros and cons of high-yield mutual funds, ETFs, and hedge funds, with insights into how these slickly-marketed vehicles really work Offers in-depth coverage of the inherent risks and rewards of the $28 billion distressed municipal bond market Features fascinating and instructive case studies illustrating, step-by-step, how the high yield investing process works And for investors prepared to do their own homework, Mr. Nguyen, supported by a team of industry experts, supplies in-depth coverage of key investment considerations for several major classes of high yield tax-exempt bonds, offering unique insights into the risk/return, trading, and liquidity characteristics of high yield municipal instruments. Written by an industry insider and offering the practical, in-depth information needed to exploit the many exciting opportunities available in this fixed-income arena, Investing in the High Yield Municipal Market is an indispensable working resource for institutional and individual investors as well as wealth managers and financial advisors. Author Biography GALT NIEDERHOFFER started her own film production company, Plum Pictures, in her twenties. She has produced eleven movies, three of them Sundance Award-winners. She lives in New York City. Review "A smart, edgy novel that is wickedly insightful about class and privilege, amusingly cynical about love and friendship, and thoroughly entertaining throughout." --Tom Perrotta "Illustrates why well-wrought cynicism never goes out of style." --The New York Times "An engrossing tale of family drama and true love--one that offers the pleasures of a layered, old-fashioned romance." --People on A Taxonomy of Barnacles "Droll and sophisticated . . . a winning, screwball comedy." --Entertainment Weekly on A Taxonomy of Barnacles "A clever, comic melodrama . . . At its funniest, A Taxonomy of Barnacles reminded me of the classic Hollywood screwball comedies from the thirties." --USA Today on A Taxonomy of Barnacles Review Quote Illustrates why well-wrought cynicism never goes out of style. Description for Reading Group Guide About this Guide The following author biography and list of questions about The Romantics are intended as resources to aid individual readers and book groups who would like to learn more about the author and this book. We hope that this guide will provide you a starting place for discussion, and suggest a variety of perspectives from which you might approach The Romantics . Excerpt from Book Chapter One Laura sat in her car at the foot of a dirt road, clutching her cell phone and map. The map was just an accessory. She knew exactly where she was. The name of the house was etched on a wooden plank tacked to one of the elms that flanked the drive. A wreath of peonies hung just below, woven with white ribbons. Using her thumb as a ruler, she measured the distance between Dark Harbor and New York, as though time had stopped as a favor to her, to allow her to catch her breath. In fairness, Lauras hostess was a girl who expected a lot of her guests. Beauty, wealth, impeccable lineage, and intelligence joined forces in Lila Hayes. At times, the combination was lethal. In college, when the two girls first became friends, Lila had been demanding-but back then she had been more endearing. The day before midterms freshman year, she hopped a plane for Guatemala, informing her roommate and parents of the trip only when she deplaned in Quezaltenango. She returned with a suitcase of indigenous textiles and new political beliefs. In April, she founded Yales Guatemalan Peace Corps. By May, she had the entire freshman class wearing sarongs. Soon after that, Laura and Lila renewed their rooming vow, moving on from the misfits assigned by lottery to the greener pastures of a sophomore double. They lived together for the duration of college, first in a storied upper-class house where every bed nestled in a dormer window, and later in a swank off-campus apartment that they found in the New Haven Gazette. Since graduation six years ago, the friendship had wilted somewhat. But rivalry glued the girls together in a way that regular contact could not. When Lila called and asked Laura to be her maid of honor, Laura accepted with mixed delight and dread. "Lo," said Lila, her voice simmering with excitement. "Li," said Laura. "Is that you?" Lila answered with a shriek of laughter that forced Laura to thrust the phone from her ear. "The day has finally come," Lila declared with signature melodrama. "I can finally flush my degree down the toilet." "You passed the bar?" Laura asked. "No, stupid, Im getting married." "Li, thats wonderful," Laura replied, raising her voice to the appropriate giddy pitch. "He did it in the most amazing way," she elaborated, rushing the plot points as one does after the third or fourth telling. "Completely perfectly perfect." Lila, though beautiful, was not graced with the gift of beautiful verbiage. "Anyway, I cant talk now," she went on. "Were driving to Maine to tell the family in person. But I wanted you to be the first to know." Volume faded as the phone dropped to the floor. "Tom, please, not right now." She giggled. "Anyway, save the month of August. Oh, and Im guessing its safe to assume you accept. Youre the maid of honor." The signal was lost before Laura could respond either way. Years of conversations this brief and hyperbolic had numbed Laura to even the most miraculous news. Lila could have called to say she had ridden a unicorn to Mars and Laura would have reacted the same way. Now, thinking back to this conversation, Laura recalled the most disturbing part. Though Lilas voice had conveyed excitement- euphoria even-it had not betrayed surprise. She had planned her marriage as clinically as she planned everything else in her life. She might as well have been calling to report that after years culling department store racks, she had finally found the perfect black dress. Preparedness was, in some ways, Lilas most annoying quality. She was appropriately dressed for any kind of weather, poised to change, at a moments notice, from a sweater to a rain slicker. In college, she had laid out the next days outfit on her wooden desk chair every night, whether she planned to wear jeans and an oxford or tights and a dress. The habit lived somewhere between compulsion and phobia-Lila hated to be surprised. Laura, on the other hand, never carried an umbrella. She rarely knew the days outfit until the morning she chose it. There was something horribly depressing, she felt, about watching the weather report. That life could be planned like the perfect summer picnic drained it of spontaneity. So the pairing of Laura and Lila sometimes seemed like a cruel joke on the part of Yales housing committee. And yet, the two girls bonded due to circumstance and curiosity, honing a friendship as though to confirm the claim that opposites attract. Class, looks, and boys conspired to make Laura the Nick to Lilas Gatsby while time and memories did their part to fasten the bond. And though the intensity of their friendship had lessened in the years since college, the friendship endured in spite of itself, much like the sturdy elm at the end of the drive. And now she was getting married. The wedding would be held at the Hayes estate in Maine, a destination as far north in the state as you could go before leaving the country. Its very latitude and travel time from New York reinforced its elitism. It was as though the mileage to the house was further proof of the familys distance from the masses. As if the drive were not inconvenient enough, the trip culminated in an hour-long ferry ride across alarmingly rough waters. The boat, constructed no later than 1953, conjured morbid possibilities all the way across. The voyage traversed an eighteen-mile channel of sparkling navy blue water and ended with a glorious approach to a harbor dotted with white houses, surrounded by forests of Christmas trees as ominous as they were magical. The house was the jewel in the crown of the Hayes family, a meaningful statement considering the many precious heirlooms in their cache. It had proven impermeable to the ebbs and flows of the familys finances, weathering four generations of sea air and porch parties. It was simply and truly one of the great estates in New En -gland, a white dove of a house that appeared to have landed expressly to enjoy the view: a dewy lawn that sloped down to the sea with the gentle curve of a babys thigh. The houses gracious wraparound porch was dappled with sunlight every morning and lit by fireflies every night, as though they had been dispensed to herald evening cocktails. The family history was well archived for anyone who cared to learn it. Polished picture frames planted throughout the house told a paradoxical story of abundance and humility. But if these pictures didnt conjure a sufficiently clear picture-capturing Mrs. Hayes at her wedding, svelte and mischievous as a cancan girl, Mr. Hayes on the squash court, the year he was captain of the Yale team, fathers and forefathers, secret society brothers and Seven Sisters alumnae, and countless snapshots of curly-haired blond athletes in various states of tennis dress-Mrs. Hayes would be the first to regale you with tales of the houses lineage, beginning with the estates formidable array of ghosts. From the pride and glee of her description, you would think the number of spirits that wafted through a house was proof of its pedigree, incrementally increasing its value like hardwood floors, closets, or a finished attic. Like all great estates, the Hayeses Maine home had a name: Northern Gardens. But in Lauras opinion, it would have been more honest to call it "Eden." It was just as sheltered and more corrupt. It had taken nearly nine hours for Laura to get there from New York, if you counted the time taken, after the car was packed, while she sat on the stoop of a Brooklyn brownstone and finished her fight with her boyfriend: forty-five minutes. She was further delayed by rush-hour traffic, a plight worsened by the aforementioned fight, and her failure to fill her rental car with gas. Luckily, the oversight caused only a minimal setback, resulting in a frantic unsignaled exit from the Hutchinson River Parkway and twenty misguided minutes in the town of Yonkers. By the time she left the state of New York, she was suitably flustered, still reeling from the mixed blessing of finding a gas station. She spent most of the state of Connecticut deciphering a scribble of directions. By the time she hit Massachusetts she was totally drained. It was only as she crossed the state line into Maine that she hazarded a guess at the highlights of the weekend ahead. It would be a veritable seminar on the Wasp culture, a study in paradox. Impeccable planning would be paired with feigned nonchalance, excessive spending with a disdain for ostentation, good wine with mediocre food. And of course, the wedding would feature all the pompous, vapid Yale alums in the Hayes family, a group that provided ample proof on its own of the importance of affirmative action. The prospect of the weekend was not improved by Lauras troubled relationship with the bride, a ten-year rivalry-really, a protracted war-over borrowed clothes, bisected bedrooms, and battled-over boyfriends that had reached its most explosive point on the subject of the groom. Luckily, Tom McDevon was a man worth fighting for. He was nothing short of legendary at Yale. Fondly known as Heaven McDevon among female company, he was coveted by women of Lilas caliber, and yet he still greeted lower lights with an earnest smile. That he was good-looking was simply a corollary to his identity. He had green eyes, brown hair, and shoulders built to comfort a weeping girl. On the basis of looks alone, he could have bedded an entire field hockey team. But his confidence-he was not oblivious to his power Details ISBN0312545991 Author Galt Niederhoffer Edition Description First Edition, Language English ISBN-10 0312545991 ISBN-13 9780312545994 Media Book Format Paperback DEWEY FIC Short Title ROMANTICS M/TV Birth 1975 Imprint St Martins Press Place of Publication New York Country of Publication United States Year 2010 Publication Date 2010-08-31 Illustrations Illustrations, black and white UK Release Date 2010-08-31 AU Release Date 2010-08-31 NZ Release Date 2010-08-31 US Release Date 2010-08-31 Pages 288 Publisher St Martins Press Audience General We've got this At The Nile, if you're looking for it, we've got it. With fast shipping, low prices, friendly service and well over a million items - you're bound to find what you want, at a price you'll love! TheNile_Item_ID:100558325;

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The Romantics by Galt Niederhoffer (English) Paperback Book

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ISBN: 9780312545994

Book Title: The Romantics

Item Height: 221mm

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Author: Galt Niederhoffer

Format: Paperback

Language: English

Topic: Literature, Books

Publisher: St Martin's Press

Publication Year: 2010

Item Weight: 268g

Number of Pages: 288 Pages

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