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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Exciting and informative.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Banker (Paperback)
Is Dick Francis a masochist, or a man to be avoided? Never have I found an author so imaginative about beatings-up. No Francis hero ever gets theough a book without being bashed thoroughly and painfully, and Tim Ekaterin, the Banker of this book, is no exception, finding himself in the last pages squashed beneath a horse sent berserk by drugs administered by the villain.Tim Ekaterin is the rising star of his family's merchant bank, who knows his way around the racing world thanks to his mother's passion for it, but has never felt particularly drawn to it. All this changes when the bank is asked to finance the purchase by a stud owner of a top racehorse, Sandcastle, for stud purposes. Things appear to run smoothly, but then a high proportion of the stallion's first crop of foals are born with a variety of defects. Ruin stares the stud owner in the face, and Tim is inexorably drawn into finding out just what is going on. As usual with Francis, it's a case of a villain who started in a small way, and was then seduced by the combined appeal of money and vengeance, and in the final pages the hero finds himself at his mercy... Exciting stuff, with meticulous attention to detail. If you ever want to know about merchant banking, or how to invest in a stallion, look no further.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Intelligent and well paced,
By DemelzaCat (UK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Banker (Paperback)
Having read most of Dick Francis' books over the years I mostly find myself re-reading Banker (along with other favourites Decider, Hot Money, High Stakes and Driving Force). They all have reluctant 'heroes' who are one step removed from racing, unlike many of his books which revolve around a jockey in the star role. The descriptions of horses and trainers leap from the pages and I enjoyed the twist of the trials and tribulations of working for a merchant bank in this book. A typically low key but intense romance adds suspense and filler to the main story about millions at stake on a fabulous stallion who may prove to be worthless. The hopes and fears of the owner and, of course, his banker (who has recommended the purchase of the horse for £5million to his bank) will grip you to the end. Enjoy!
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Gripping narrative,
This review is from: Banker (The Dick Francis Library) (Hardcover)
This work brings the world of racing (always a feature of Dick Francis books) into the world of banking. The narrator is Tim Ekaterin of the Paul Ekaterin Merchant bank. The story begins quite mildly with small problems within the bank such as competitors taking over companies that Eketarin’s were setting up. There is little doubt that someone inside the bank is passing on confidential information. Over the next three years the issues increase until the final solution to the puzzle. As usual Francis gives a very easy to read thriller.
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