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THE EPIC RISE AND FALL OF BEARINGPOINT INCORPORATED

A comprehensive if questionably relevant accounting of a corporate meltdown.

White provides an insider’s view of a company that should have been successful but went bankrupt instead.

BearingPoint Incorporated (known before its IPO as KPMG Consulting) was a company offering its corporate clients auditing, assurance, taxation, actuarial, legal, consulting, and other professional services. It was spun off of its parent company, KPMG—considered one of the “Big Four” in the professional services industry—in 2001. By 2009, it had filed for Chapter 11 protections. How did BearingPoint go from a promising new company launched by experienced executives from a massive and trusted business network to bankruptcy in just seven years? In this book, White, who worked for BearingPoint from 1993 to 2008, diagnoses what he believes were the 30 issues that contributed to the company’s ultimate downfall. “This is not a book about a ‘bankruptcy,’” he explains in the introduction; “It’s a book about ‘principles’ and what happens when egos are over-empowering, along with the importance of making good, well-informed, decisions and the impact of the bad ones.” There were baked-in problems with BearingPoint from the beginning, from the structure of the public offering to the lack of oversight from the board of directors to the leadership’s dearth of experience with publicly traded companies. The author goes through the company’s complex history to explain why it was successful in the first place and why the particularities of its IPO, combined with a number of other factors within the professional service industry and the economy at large, doomed it to failure. Ultimately, White places much blame on the four horsemen of the corporate apocalypse: greed, ego, arrogance, and ignorance.

The author unpacks these issues with a distinctively off-beat (if not entirely fluid) narration. Early on, the longtime BearingPoint employee describes the company’s downfall as being “like a play and included some comedy, a little bit of tyranny, lots of drama combined with a few significant twists and turns, but in the end, it became a tragedy, and I was in the orchestra pit for all of it, although I will admit there were times I wished I was in the upper balcony.” White is certainly thorough, and the amount of research that went into the work is apparent (and frankly staggering). The author is so scrupulous that he sometimes comes across as a little obsessive, and he admits as much: White claims to have analyzed 1,500 SEC filings while writing the book, and he frequently quotes from the comprehensive “personal journal” that he kept “throughout [his] entire working career.” Given BearingPoint’s relative obscurity, and the fact that its demise did not have much of an effect beyond the circle of its employees and investors, the noteworthiness of its bankruptcy is not entirely clear. For all of his charts and diagrams—and there are many—White largely fails to sell the comedy and drama of the story that he promises in his introduction. Though this corporate chronicle may be of interest to those researching bankruptcy, it is difficult to imagine the work finding a wide audience.

A comprehensive if questionably relevant accounting of a corporate meltdown.

Pub Date: N/A

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: -

Publisher: N/A

Review Posted Online: Aug. 29, 2024

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THE ORCS OF NEW YORK

An inventive, timely fantasy that’s nonstop fun.

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A businessman plans to exploit a portal to a magical realm in this fantasy adventure.

Marc Aaron has a knack for finding oil. He’s traveled all over Africa and the Middle East, guiding his small company, Epoch, to success. When billionaire Roland Griff summons him to New York, Marc leaves Libya immediately. In anticipation of a thrilling new job prospect, Marc asks his wife, Diane, and their children to meet him in Manhattan. The oilman reunites with his family at the Waldorf Astoria hotel after two years apart. Marc receives a chilly reception from his wife and his daughter, who asks, “So, how’s the greenhouse-gas biz going?” Soon, the family is touring the Griff Corp building. To his astonishment, Marc learns that the company’s success with importing goods and materials is the result of a magical gateway. In a subterranean chamber, a strange glowing orb gives Griff access to a medieval realm of elves, orcs, and other magical beings. Griff wants Marc’s expertise in acquiring this Fourth World’s resources. When armed soldiers prepare to enter the gateway, the general, an orc, launches his invasion plan. Robertson has ensured that there’s fun, heart, and excitement in every scene of his latest novel. Marc and Diane’s rocky marriage is a drama on par with the orc invasion; he takes Griff’s offer without consulting her so the family can finally live together. When war hits the city’s streets, events remain entertaining, with a measured amount of gore that never feels gratuitous (“The headless troll turned and felt about awkwardly for its missing cranium”). Robertson’s comedic timing is phenomenal, as when a blowhard general admires his vanilla latte by saying, “If our boys had these in ’Nam we’d have won that war.” Moral and environmental reckonings factor into the finale, e.g., Griff tells Marc, “Drilling for oil, exploiting the locals is what we do, you and I.” A last-minute gambit sets up a potentially bold sequel.

An inventive, timely fantasy that’s nonstop fun.

Pub Date: N/A

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: 286

Publisher: Gin & Tonic Press

Review Posted Online: March 3, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2022

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IT'S ALL ABOUT THE INCOME

THE SIMPLE SYSTEM FOR A BIG RETIREMENT

A straightforward, if rather basic, understanding of income considerations in one’s later years.

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Financial planner Lynch provides a plan for people contemplating retirement in this financial how-to book.

“Your gut tells you that you have enough money to retire, but your head is not quite sure,” the author writes, and his book aims to help readers make up their minds. He begins with the story of a fictional potential retiree named Maria who had a sizable savings account that generated enough interest to supplement her Social Security income. But with the Great Recession of 2007 to 2009, she lost most of that supplemental income. Lynch uses this example to examine earlier financial truisms that no longer work in today’s market: “It’s time for a new formula and a new definition of safety,” he says. The book aims to help readers find ways to generate wealth that aren’t subject to economic swings that are out of readers’ control. Using real-life examples, Lynch analyzes how much each family needs in various “buckets” to generate income, outlining three basic parts to any retirement plan: principal, which is a “U.S. government-denominated asset that will never decline in nominal value”; reliable income; and growth that outpaces inflation. Over the course of the book, Lynch explains these three aspects of generating retirement income in simple, clear terms, and with each example, he includes easy-to-understand charts and illustrations to clarify his points. Those who are familiar with retirement literature are likely to find it rather generic, though, with few new insights. That said, many readers will appreciate the takeaway that not considering inflation when planning for retirement can be a costly oversight: “Inflation: The carbon monoxide of retirement—the slow, silent killer that turns a dollar into fifty cents.”

A straightforward, if rather basic, understanding of income considerations in one’s later years.

Pub Date: May 31, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-5445-3026-0

Page Count: 164

Publisher: Lioncrest Publishing

Review Posted Online: July 25, 2022

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