Enrich tells an important story of the gradual corruption of the rule of law, and of the broader corruption of our society. * American Prospect * Servants of the Damned is a feat of thoughtful, detailed research, rendering with clarity and even compassion the moral drift of big law. As an attorney, I found it illuminating but this is important reading for anyone concerned about law and policy. -- Ronan Farrow, Pulitzer Prizewinning author of Catch and Kill Astonishing A powerful and important picture of how mega law firms distort justice. * The Washington Post * A withering study of how big law got into bed with the 45th president Informative and disturbing as much a rebuke of one large firm as it is an indictment of Trumps Republican party. -- Lloyd Green * The Guardian * A blistering study. -- Lawrence Douglas * TLS * This fascinating book is somehow both devastating and rollicking all at the same time. Enrich brings us into the room to watch how a modest law firm built on honourable service gradually becomes an uber-shield for the worst of American greed and abuse all in the quest for enormous billable profits and outsized power. From handling a fatal gas explosion to terrorising a tobacco whistleblower to aiding Donald Trump, it's all in here. -- Carol Leonnig, Pulitzer Prizewinning co-author of A Very Stable Genius and author of Zero Fail A fast-moving, damning book Essential reading for students of the Trump corruption machine. -- Kirkus Reviews, starred review The legal industry has sold its soul to deep-pocketed corporations and polarising politicians, according to this impassioned indictment of international law firm Jones Day and its peers Enrichs history of Jones Day probes the corrosion of ethics after the advent of law firm ads in the 1970s touched off a spiral of money-grubbing, and sketches engrossing vignettes of the predatory culture that resulted a vivid, crackling account of the law at its most bullying. Readers will be outraged. * Publishers Weekly * Praise for Dark Towers:
A revelatory book about the rise and fall of the worlds biggest bank Has all the elements of a page-turning mystery novel. * Washington Post * Praise for Dark Towers:
Enrich compellingly shows how unchecked ambition twisted a pillar of German finance into a reckless casino where amorality and criminality thrived. * New York Times Book Review * Praise for Dark Towers:
In Dark Towers, David Enrich tells the story of how one of the worlds mightiest banks careened off the rails, threatening everything from our financial system to our democracy through its reckless entanglement with Donald Trump. Darkly fascinating and yet all too real, its a tale that will keep you up at night. -- John Carreyrou, Pulitzer Prize winner and New York Times bestselling author of Bad Blood