Ranan Laurie (pictured), an Israeli war hero, the world’s most-syndicated political cartoonist, and a direct descendant of the Bible’s Prophet Isaiah, who died Wednesday at 90 in Las Vegas, was also a hero of mine. While others at Fifteen Central Park West who’d given me interviews for House of Outrageous Fortune, my book on the building, hid under furniture after it was published to avoid the wrath of some of their neighbors, Lurie stepped up and, along with real estate broker Wendy Sarasohn, on April 7, 2014, opened the doors of his apartment in the building for a publication party for the book. That set off a Page Six lede-worthy kerfuffle that saw Fifteen residents Daniel Loeb and Barry Rosenstein try–and fail–to put the kibosh on the party, with an email campaign and at least one threatening phone call to one of the hosts. The party proceeded, though I was forced to hire bodyguards, ostensibly to protect Fifteen’s residents from the scary guest list. (It turned out the only crasher was a Fifteen homeowners.) Unreported at the time was Lurie’s account of an encounter with Loeb, in which, or so Lurie claimed, he told the CEO of the Third Point hedge fund that after being shot by Arabs and having Ugandan dictator Idi Amin threaten to cut out his heart and eat it, the hostility of hedge fund managers left him unmoved. HOOF, as I called the book, remains timely: an excerpt on Fifteen’s Russian oligarch residents will shortly appear in the summer issue of Park Magazine.