Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781416593942 |
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Publisher: | Scribner |
Publication date: | 01/10/2012 |
Sold by: | SIMON & SCHUSTER |
Format: | NOOK Book |
Pages: | 352 |
Sales rank: | 904,758 |
File size: | 3 MB |
About the Author
Customer Reviews
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
King Larry
4.5 out of 5
based on
0 ratings.
2 reviews.
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i suppose the probate part of the book is a bit dense, but it's worth pushing through to find yourself truly immersed in the mess Larry left behind. not sure how else to get the reader there. Hillblom was a perve, to be sure, but his life truly was a rags to riches story with an interesting twist--this rich guy actually ran from the limelight and seemed to enjoy being surrounded by poverty. and young girls, sadly. anyway, fascinating read and Scurlock is a darn good writer.
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Larry Hillblom was not a “citizen of the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands” (he was a United States citizen and CNMI resident), Magellan did not discover Saipan and call it “Island of Thieves” (that was Guam), betel nut is not taken with salt (it’s lime) and Yap lies not northward of Saipan but southward. Those and other meddling errors should not detract from the fascinating story of a self-made, idiosyncratic mastermind. As a famed San Francisco attorney said when asked why Larry frequented girlie bars in the Philippines, “it was, huh, a mere distraction.” That isn’t in the book but the author had to stop somewhere. Besides Larry never sweated the small stuff. He was a big-picture guy. And certainly the biography was ripe since more than a decade had passed and nobody had written one. It’s our fortune that James Scurlock, who never met Hillblom, tried to get to know this peculiar guy better by spending months pouring over the documents of the longest probate case in U.S. history, a million pages, and years interviewing dozens of people around the world who had had dealings with Larry. Of course, some people didn’t talk or tell him everything and you can‘t blame them either. The book abounds in interesting anecdotes. My favorite is when, in a classic game of one-upmanship, dapper Continental bigwig Frank Lorenzo is forced to personally hand the airline’s #1 priority pass to a skinny guy in t-shirt and jeans. Punk beats Wall Street. Who would of thought that? Larry did.
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