Deeds
Joseph Amiel
From Publishers Weekly In a dramatic novel filled with memorable characters, Amiel (Birthright) skillfully depicts the frenetic, high-stakes world of Ralph Behr, a Manhattan real estate developer. Unbridled ambition brings Ralph to the pinnacle of his profession at age 36, yet many detest his brashness, conceit, materialism and obsession with self-gratification. To ensure his immortality, he plans to erect three 150-story towers called Behr Center in New York City. Just as the controversial project gets under way, Ralph's father, Henry, an aging real estate tycoon, tells his son some astounding news. Twenty years ago, Henry's partner, Abe Weintraub, committed fraud and went to prison. Abe threatened to implicate Henry unless he agreed to surrender half the Behr fortune to the Weintraubs upon Abe's release. Henry commands Ralph to wed Abe's daughter, Gail, to make the impending $100 million transfer less conspicuous. The union turns out to be acrimonious, for Gail, an impassioned champion of the rights of battered women, loathes the egotistical rich in whose company she finds herself. While placating his spirited bride, Ralph dodges mounting opposition to Behr Center, where a catastrophe occurs that radically changes his life. Amiel expertly portrays these complex, volatile individuals, and the unexpected love that eventually binds Ralph and Gail. Saratoga and other playgrounds of the affluent are colorfully depicted, as is the milieu of New York's glitterati. 50,000 first printing; $50,000 ad/promo; Troll Book Club main selection. Copyright 1987 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Library Journal Thirty-six-year-old Ralph Behr is the third generation of Behrs involved in real estate development in New York. Wealthy and influential, Ralph is finalizing plans for the monumental Behr Center, a complex meant to revive Lower Manhattan's East Side, when his father, Henry, tells him that to settle an old debt he must enter into a marriage of convenience with Gail Benedict, daughter of Henry's old business partner. So begins a tempestuous relationship between two very different peopleGail, a women's activist and advocate for the poor, and Ralph, whom she sees as the evil personification of greed, wealth, and tyranny. Both main characters mature in the course of this well-written, entertaining book. Troll Book Club main selection.Maria A. Perez-Stable, Western Michigan Univ. Libs., KalamazooCopyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.