Railey Jane Savage is an editor and artist. She has an expensive English degree from Smith College, which has proven 100% worth the time, money, and agony that comes with a liberal arts degree. Savage loves her family and lives happily with two ill-behaved cats in Ithaca, New York.
"Chiselers, cheaters, swindlers and their marks: This lively and
witty survey of a colorful period of enterprising and audacious
cons reads like a rapid-fire telegraph from another time. Railey
Jane Savage's perspective is historical, but - one very real lesson
from this entertaining and deeply researched book is that, as long
as people want to get rich quick, there will also be enthusiastic
schemers dangling dreams on a dime. The only thing that has really
changed between those times and this ... are the hats." - Amy
Dickinson, "Ask Amy" advice columnist, NPR contributor, and NYTimes
bestselling author of Strangers Tend to Tell Me Things
"Railey Jane Savage relishes language almost as much as she does
her delicious characters, and her book travels swiftly through the
ages in some top-notch storytelling. She struts that fine line
between an enchantment with her swindlers' deeds and a skeptical
independence that pins them in place with historical
contextualization--an unbeatable combination."--Amy Reading, author
of The Mark Inside: A Perfect Swindle, a Cunning Revenge, and a
Small History of the Big Con
NatGalley Review: 5 starsLast updated on 10 Aug 2021"This arresting
book Nonfiction book contains stories of American swindles and cons
from 1850-1950 before the advent of the internet, before word
spread like wildfire. Such daring and deception is mind boggling!
What people did...and what drove them to their actions...is
discussed here. Some were preposterous, a few a bit more
believable, but all fascinating to read many decades later. Reading
these stories I couldn't help but feel a tiny bit of appreciation
for what went into intricate plans. Written with wit and
cleverness, the author uses interviews, quotes and documents as
well as photographs and newspaper advertisements ("died yesterday"
struck me in particular!) to draw information from. Victims of
these swindles felt taken, foolish and angered, just as they would
now. I can almost picture and hear Lord Gordon's "cworner lots" as
he carefully avoided being photographed in his own way. His deeds,
imprisonment and demise are all detailed. Reading about the
"afters" is fascinating. The California gold rush drove people to
do things they typically couldn't. The story about staking claims,
bags of gems, adventure, gold and arranged "hidden" gems is
gripping. We are also told about Dr. Blood and his "invention" and
marketing. Princess Editha Montez really takes the cake, though.
Her tooth cavity trick is almost laughable. As a spiritualist she
used various...er...mediums. It actually seems as though she
believed her own lies and was put out when others didn't! And then
there's Betty Bigley who used her calling cards in a special and
devious way. We read of the scammer with a surprising Andrew
Carnegie link. Circus trials, fraud, inheritance claims, buying
cars for people with others' money...wow. Interesting
stuff.Nonfiction and History readers, do pick this up. I learned a
lot!My sincere thank you to Rowman & Littlefield, Lyons Press and
NetGalley for the privilege of reading this amusing book."--Brenda
Carleton, reviewer at Agora Books
NetGalley review: 4 starsLast updated on 03 Aug 2021"I like reading
history (especially true crime) and I thought this would be
interesting. I wasn't disappointed. It had stories I hadn't come
across before."--Norma Carroll, consumer reviewer
NetGalley Review: 4 starsLast updated on 28 Aug 2021"Meticulously
crafted and sharp-honed, this book focuses on old-fashioned
bribery, deceit, and flat-out fraud over the course of one century
through 1850 and 1950. Many of the swindles have a timeless feeling
that makes your gut sink in despair and disbelief while reading how
the fraud was pulled off on the weak, the gullible, and the
unsuspecting. Nothing makes these crimes different from modern
catfishing or financial trickery other than the internet was not
used.I found this to be concise, uniform, and well-researched, as
well as swiftly paced. It reads like a novel, with the dialogue and
description to match. The people feel as real as they actually were
in real life. I also enjoyed the brief forays into snarky humor
that lightened some of the secondhand dread I felt while reading
about people being financially and emotionally ruined by scam
artists. This one-liner about multiple conmen gathered together
with the intent of conning each other out of property and money (as
well as their reputations) made me laugh out loud: "Room 110 was
home to an ouroboros of scammers that day.""--Calyssa Moulton,
consumer reviewer
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