An “erudite work… about the American Dream.” — The Jewish Week
“At once a soap opera and work of scholarship… it is both a narrowly focused history of a single apartment building and a case study in how wealth, power and perceived social standing changes hands over time. The book probes – and prods and skewers, enticing readers with details of marriages, divorces, wealth squandering, alleged […]
“Incredible wealth: the view from up there.”
Marketplace on American Public Media radio looks up at 740 Park.
740 Park “scintillates.” — Variety
“Hiltons, schmiltons… Michael Gross scintillates readers with Rockefellers, Vanderbilts, Chryslers, and Bouviers… A no-holds-barred view into the billionaire lifestyle.” — Variety StylePhile, October 25, 2005
An “embarrassment of riches,” says the New York Times
“One building as [a] microcosm of life on a silver platter… The voyeurism is so giddy that ‘740 Park’ sometimes feels like an extended feat of free-association. The description of an apartment can lead to the owner’s house in Newport – and off we go to European chateaus, Palm Beach, grouse hunting, the Princeton varsity […]
“Class, money and power,” says mediabistro
Blogger extraordinaire Elizabeth Spiers, writing on mediabistro.com, says “740 Park is an extensive biography of the life and history of the world’s richest apartment building. Gross’s impeccable research is beautifully synthesized into a comprehensive narrative about class, money and power. ”
“A scorching tell-all,” says Barnes & Noble
“For many of the world’s elite, Manhattan’s 740 Park Avenue is the most prestigious address on earth… Over the years, this most sought-after co-op has also been a seedbed of scandals and juicy rumors, including the possible murder of one of its billionaire tenants. Society journalist Michael Gross has been trolling these waters for decades. […]
Conde, not nasty
“Money, murder, mayhem — and that’s before the broker’s fees.” — House & Garden, November 2005 “Along the society-fashion axis, the talk is about Michael Gross’ high-gossip chronicle 740 Park, which makes the case that architecture is destiny.” — William Norwich, Vogue, November 2005
“Jaw-dropping apartment porn,” says Fortune
“Ogling other people’s real estate has become the national pastime. But for jaw-dropping apartment porn, it’s hard to beat Michael Gross’s description of corporate raider Saul Steinberg’s place at 740 Park Avenue circa the ’70s… But Gross’s 740 Park doesn’t stop there… Gross traces the history of this fabled 75-year-old edifice and its inhabitants, who […]
“Compelling,” says OK!
“740 Park is filled with compelling, often tragic, stories about the social elite dying to call this address their own. Now you can gain access — without the million-dollar deposit.” — OK! Magazine
Radar loves “lascivious hijinks”
“Since 1930… 740 Park Avenue been the world’s most exclusive address. But now, anyone can get inside the building, despite snooty board members and anemic portfolios, thanks to 740 Park [which] proves that the only thing more decadent than a 20,000 square foot apartment in the middle of Manhattan is the lascivious hijinks of its […]