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Rogues keefe review
Rogues keefe review






rogues keefe review

Koch spent considerable amounts of time and money filing lawsuits against Rodenstock, throwing himself "into his battle against Rodenstock and phony wine with the same headlong enthusiasm that he devoted to collecting wine in the first place."Īnother avenger profiled is Ken Dornstein, who lost his brother in the 1988 Lockerbie airline bombing. One collector of the "Th.J." bottles, as they came to be known, was American tycoon Bill Koch, brother of the renowned conservative donors Charles and David. (Or, in the case of death penalty defense lawyer Judy Clarke, getting the accused off.) Take accused German wine forger Hardy Rodenstock, who died in 2018 still insisting on the authenticity of his discoveries, most notably bottles from the 1780s that supposedly once belonged to Thomas Jefferson. Keefe is frequently engaged with stories involving a rogue and a pursuer who is obsessed with bringing the criminal to justice. Taken together, the essays reflect the collective preoccupations of the unsettling era in which we now live: mass shootings and terrorism, unaddressed mental health issues, and the many flavors of financial corruption. Taken separately, each piece offers a portrayal of rogues variously defined, ranging from the overtly criminal to the lovable (in the case of chef Anthony Bourdain).

rogues keefe review

His latest book, "Rogues: True Stories of Grifters, Killers, Rebels and Crooks," offers a glimpse at these preoccupations in his shorter-form work, a collection of essays originally written for the New Yorker. In most of his previous bestselling books, including "Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland" and "Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty," journalist Patrick Radden Keefe has masterfully illuminated what he calls his "abiding preoccupations." These are, namely, "crime and corruption, secrets and lies, the permeable membrane separating licit and illicit worlds, the bonds of family, the power of denial."








Rogues keefe review