New York’s Daily News and England’s Guardian both peeked past the doormen at 740 Park today. The News focused on Ezra Merkin, the whipping boy du jour for the Great Recession. The Guardian piece fascinates me more because back when 740 Park was first published, no British publisher would take it on. Their reason? Or at least the one they told me? It was “too New York.” I told myself that was just as well because publishing “investigative” non-fiction there is a hairy business thanks to England’s status as the favorite destination for what are called libel tourists — people who use its Alice-in-Wonderland libel laws to try and punish writers otherwise protected by American press freedoms. And thanks to the Web anyone almost anywhere can get any book. But I am gratified that at least some Brits have now realized how the behavior and morality (public and private) of New York’s most powerful can affect the entire world. Better late than never, I guess. Just as I’m glad that some people are now picking up on a theme I saw emerging as I wrote 740 and realized the building had ben conceived in a bubble economy and opened just as it popped and went flat. History repeats itself and those who don’t recall it, or choose to ignore it, are usually condemned to repeat it, often to their detriment. That’s not a local phenomenon. Neither, come to think of it, are the forces that create and shape art museums. So maybe the British won’t be forced to order my new book, Rogues’ Gallery, from overseas.