"Can''t recommend this joint enough. It is extremely hard to translate what is happening in our society right now. Aaron Glantz does a great job moving through the jungle of jargon. But most importantly he implicitly raises a question that has been quietly dogging me for years: What does it mean to tell your children that their success is ultimately a matter of discipline, education, hard work, and citizenship, and then see that those factors have almost no power to explain the (financial) success of the Titans of America. An illuminating and discomfiting read." -- Ta-Nehisi Coates (via Instagram) "Essential reading." -- New York Review of Books "Glantz skillfully tells a bigger story about American housing that''s tortuous, confounding and ultimately enraging." -- New York Times "With prose that is as plainspoken as it is propulsive, Glantz explains how homeownership propelled the American Dream until 1986 only to fall, one financial scheme at a time, at the hands of billionaire money-grabbers and the failing regulators and gutless politicians who enable them.
" -- Beth Macy, author of Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America "In case there was ever any doubt that the world of high finance affects American households, Aaron Glantz lays it to rest in this gripping narrative of how the foreclosure machine became a grand mechanism to convert America''s historic wealth building asset--its homes--into a commodity for financiers." -- Sarah Bloom Raskin, former deputy secretary of the US Treasury and former governor of the Federal Reserve Board "An eye-opening account of how a cast of characters from Wall Street to Hollywood enriched themselves at the expense of American families. Glantz weaves together personal stories, historical context, and sharp and insightful analysis of how financiers created predatory products that wreaked devastation on the US economy and. countless families." -- Mehrsa Baradaran, professor of law at the University of California, Irvine School of Law "Glantz, through exemplary journalism, reveals the new corporate landlords'' relationship to Donald Trump and their exploitation of loopholes in public policy, in combination with the endless resources of greedy bankers, to transform the 2008 foreclosure crisis into predatory renting schemes and cash in on widespread housing insecurity." -- Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, author of Race for Profit: How Banks and the Real Estate Industry Undermined Black Homeownership "This is a story that needs to be told, and Glantz tells it beautifully. Homewreckers reads like a novel, but it carries an important message: We must never let this happen again." -- Alan S.
Blinder, Gordon S. Rentscher Professor of Economics and Public Affairs, Princeton University, former member of the Council of Economic Advisers, Vice Chairman of the Board of the Federal Reserve System "In this remarkable book, Aaron Glantz provides a well-researched, highly readable look at one of the nation''s most underreported stories.a must-read for anyone who wants to understand the Great Recession and the role of the voracious financial interests who would go on to put Donald Trump in the White House." -- Gwenda Blair, author of The Trumps: Three Generations of Builders and a President "A tale of greed and corruption.A solid, useful exploration of a system that ''needs substantial, systemic change.''" -- Kirkus Reviews "[A] cogent, infuriating exposé. lucid prose and impressive research make this an essential account of an under-the-radar housing crisis." -- Publishers Weekly "Glantz does an excellent job explaining the financial complexities of the housing crisis and its fallout.
But the real strength of his book comes from the personal stories he weaves in to illustrate his points.the most surprising stories are those of the homewreckers themselves." -- BookPage "A shocking investigation into America''s housing crisis. A tale of greed and corruption." -- Christiane Amanpour "Smart, engrossing. chronicles how a few vulture capitalists scored big paydays on the backs of beleaguered middle-class homeowners, exploiting government largesse to cover their losses - and positioning themselves for top Trump administration jobs." -- San Francisco Chronicle.