Monkey Business: Swinging Through the Wall Street Jungle by John Rolfe, Peter Troob, Peter Troob, Peter Troob

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(Paperback)

Average Customer Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4.5 out of 5 (5 ratings)

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  • Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
  • Pub. Date: April 2001
  • ISBN-13: 9780446676953
  • Sales Rank: 22,018
  • 273pp
 
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Synopsis

Monkey Business is the hilarious confession of two young investment bankers, John Rolfe and Peter Troob, of what it's like at ground zero on The Street. Forget what you've read, forget what you've heard, forget what you've been taught. Monkey Business pulls off Wall Street's suspenders and gives the reader the inside skinny on what working at an investment bank is all about." "Fresh out of Wharton and Harvard business schools, the authors ran willingly into the open arms of investment bank Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenerette. Once there, they discovered themselves foot soldiers in an investment banking army of overworked and frustrated lemmings furiously trying to spin straw into gold. Escaping with their sanity only partially intact, John and Peter have perfectly captured the chaotic essence of the Wall Street carnival and the outlandish personalities that make it all him.

Publishers Weekly

As eager-beaver business school students, Rolfe and Troob garnered job offers as junior associates at the elite Wall Street investment bank Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, lured by dreams of wealth, glamour and power. Readers whose fascination with Wall Street shenanigans has been fueled by Michael Lewis's Liar's Poker will find this thorough rundown of an investment bank associate's daily routine sobering. By the time Rolfe and Troob were able to discern the key fact that the "investment banking community has long been an oligopoly, with only a handful of real players with the size and scale to drive through the big deals," they were already grappling with the gritty reality of performing grunt labor in an environment ruled by despotic senior partners who called innumerable meetings to set unrealistic deadlines and make superhuman demands on anybody within screaming distance. The authors' resulting disappointment and disaffection leaps off every page. Unfortunately, they take out their frustrations with indiscriminate potshots at such easy targets as word processors ("Christopher Street fairies"), copy center personnel ("a platoon of patriotic Puerto Ricans" they offhandedly refer to as "militants") and female research analysts (whom they describe as "under-sexed, eager-to-please"). Long before the hapless authors have stooped to expressing their fury at the bank by such puerile antics as urinating into a beer bottle while seated at a banquet table at the Christmas party, readers will have had enough. (Apr.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|

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Customer Reviews

Number of Reviews: 5
Average Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4.5 out of 5
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Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5 Great and fun read!
D, A reviewer, 04/02/2008

The three star review on this book is quite unfair. This book is not Liar's Poker and rightly so. In my opinion, it is way funnier than LP. As an ex-investment banker, I can attest that the situations described are pretty typical of what goes on inside the high pressure cooker environment of an IB. The viewpoint is that of an associate in the bank. That is, someone right after an MBA degree. I laughed a lot while reading the book.

Customer Rating for this product is 3 out of 5 No Liar's Poker
Gery Menegaz, A reviewer, 01/03/2007

To paraphrase what Lloyd Bentsen said to Dan Quayle: “I have read Liar’s Poker, and Monkey Business is no Liar’s Poker!” It seemed to me that the book tried very hard to one up the Lewis classic to the degree that the protagonists seem pompous and completely unlikable. Additionally, unlike the Lewis book, the names are all changed, so there is no accountability. The result of which is they can exaggerate without being challenged, which is what appears to have happened here. I read it, but would not recommend it.

Also recommended: Liar's Poker

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