**Vintage Tom Wolfe, The Bonfire of the Vanities, the #1 bestseller
that will forever define late-twentieth-century New York style.
**
"No one has portrayed New York Society this accurately and
devastatingly since Edith Wharton" (The National Review)
"A page-turner . . . Brilliant high comedy." (The New Republic)
Sherman McCoy, the central figure of Tom Wolfe's first novel, is a young
investment banker with a fourteen-room apartment in Manhattan. When he
is involved in a freak accident in the Bronx, prosecutors, politicians,
the press, the police, the clergy, and assorted hustlers high and low
close in on him, licking their chops and giving us a gargantuan helping
of the human comedy, of New York in the 1980s, a city boiling over with
racial and ethnic hostilities and burning with the itch to Grab It Now.
Wolfe's novel is a big, panoramic story of the metropolis that
reinforces the author's reputation as the foremost chronicler of the way
we live in America.
Adapted to film in 1990 by director Brian De Palma, the movie stars Tom
Hanks, Bruce Willis, Melanie Griffith, and Morgan Freeman.