A noisy satire on Manhattans Wall Street cash-bloated plutocracy Hugely readable. -- John Sutherland * The Times * If there is a set-book of the Eighties, it is Tom Wolfe's Bonfire of the Vanities. No other novel has achieved such a precise place in the imagination of the reading classes. With his first attempt at fiction Wolfe has become the 'Dickens or Balzac of his age'; the dandy journalist has become the towering genius * The Times * Wolfe's modern morality tale displays the sardonic humour and sharp appreciation of the grotesque familiar to admirers of his non fiction... Savagely funny and compelling * Guardian * The air of New York crackles with an energy that causes the adrenalin to pump, until one has the illusion that this is where the whole of life is taking place. The feeling is perfectly reproduced in Wolfe's novel, which opens such cans of worms as racial hostility, dress codes, political labelling and the cynical opportunism that governs every action. It's, well, electric * Sunday Times * It's witty, sprawling and ambitious * Daily Telegraph * Impossible to put down * Wall Street Journal * Delicious fun * New York Times * Moves with a swift comic logic . . . An innovative and imaginative and intricate plot . . .welds Wolfe's descriptions of dinner parties, restaurant games, Wall Street trading, and courthouse chaos into more than a tour de force * Time * Acerbically funny -- Christina Koning * The Times * Still very funny and smartly written a good 20 years after it was first published -- Colin Waters * Sunday Herald *