The release this week of my pal David Netto‘s luscious book, Rosario Candela & the New York Apartment, 1927–1937: The Architecture of the Age, celebrating the architect of 740 Park Avenue, has renewed interest in the great cooperative apartment houses of Manhattan and, apparently, my 2005 book 740 Park. Reviewing Netto (whose collaborators include Paul Goldberger and Peter Pennoyer) in AirMail, Celia McGee writes, “In tone it shares little with journalist Michael Gross’s gossipalooza 740 Park: The Story of the World’s Richest Apartment Building, which made scandalizing waves in 2005. But it’s also striking the extent to which the newly super-rich deemed disreputable by Gross at the time—Stephen Schwarzman was a standout—now rate as giants of philanthropy and pillars of society” My book does indeed feature private equity’s Schwarzman–indeed, it ends on what was then his failure to attain Rockefelleresque heights after he bought John D. Rockefeller Jr.’s former home at 740. But if the avid MAGA supporter is now a pillar of society, maybe it needs a Samson named Kamala Harris to tear it down.