Business Books: Shoeshine boy dishes Wall Street dirt
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The 28-year old Brazilian whose experiences are fictionalized in the novel "Confessions of a Wall Street Shoeshine Boy" says traders at the bank where he plies his trade have been treating him better since the book was published.
"They're respecting me a lot more," he said in an interview. "They think I'm like a celebrity." But he still declined to give his real name for fear of reprisals.
The book, written by Doug Stumpf, an editor at Vanity Fair magazine, paints a racy picture of a trading floor where sex, drugs and insider trading run rampant.
Did the real shoeshine boy sleep with one of the bank's senior partners even as she employed his girlfriend as a nanny, snort cocaine alongside interns at nightclubs and travel first class to the Bahamas as a courier for a hedge fund manager?
The book's title character, Gil, does all those things, telling his story in a slangy patois that dramatizes his lack of formal education -- neither the real nor the fictional shoeshine boy finished high school.
"Thanks God, this guys don't take me serious because they see me doing the job that I do," the fictional Gil says of the traders. "They probably think I'm not intelligent at all. They just have me as a kid."
The book has drawn comparisons with "Liars Poker," Michael Lewis' insider portrait of the frat-house culture at Salomon Brothers in the 1980s. But Stumpf insists that his book, although based on real experiences, is fiction.
A DIFFERENT LENS
Naturally outgoing, the shoeshine boy is a keen observer and a good listener who draws confessions from traders about wild bachelor parties and witnesses bizarre pranks.
The characters range from the Russian-model besotted trader who gets one of Gil's friends fired to Bill Bigelow, the aging but wily chief executive.
Street-smart but understanding little of the minutiae of finance, Gil tends to view things through a different lens, Stumpf said in an interview.
"He strips away all of that stuff and has only this human view," he said. "That was my appeal in using him as narrator.
The novel, film rights to which have been optioned by Warner Brothers, also draws on Stumpf's own experiences. The book is alternately narrated by Gil and by a journalist at "Glossy," a magazine with more than a passing resemblance to the real Vanity Fair.
At the core of the book is the friendship between two very different people: the shoeshine boy who stumbles upon a burgeoning scandal and Greg, the journalist who pursues the story to help Gil's friend get his job back.
By the book's closing chapters, though, it is Greg who needs a big scoop to keep his own job even as Gil fears his role in exposing the scandal could get him fired -- or worse. Continued...


