Chris Kelch is one of the rising stars at the downtown firm of Freshler Feld. At only twenty-eight, he's a top-rated equity research analyst; last year, he pulled down nearly half a million dollars. His girlfriend also happens to be lovely and supportive. Kelch's smalltown, single-parent, Midwestern roots seem far behind, until a thinly veiled profile of Kelch runs in a prominent magazine and things begin to fall apart. Not only does the piece reveal company secrets and cast Freshler Feld in a bad light, it also makes Kelch feel like a naif, for it reveals far more about his conflicted feelings about his past and his job than he has admitted even to himself. With suspense and style, The Contrarians not only creates one of the most memorable ordinary guys in recent American fiction, it also examines, as no novel has done before, the rise--and the seeds of the fall--of late-nineties Wall Street.
Gary Sernovitzis also the author ofGreat American Plain. He lives in New York City.
With Wall Street research departments currently under siege, the time ofThe Contrarianscouldn't be better. The Wall Street Journal
The Contrarians[is] a novel of ideas in a tradition not much observed in our own literature...Extremely clever. Richard Eder, The New York Times
The Contrariansis a cautionary tale very much worth reading....The best part of the book is Kelch's worm's-eye view of the daily pressures that analysts face. The Wall Street Journal