Daniel Koehler is the author of four novels, "Flyover Country" (2004), "The Sleeping Cab" (2006), "Unbankerly Behavior" (2008), and "Splitting Washington" (2010). His short pieces have appeared in The Best of Tales From the South, The Birmingham Arts Journal, New Works Review, BareBack Magazine, Inner Sins, The Rusty Nail, The Storyteller, The Harvard Bulletin, among others. Literary honors include finalist status in three international screenplay competitions and regional awards for his short stories.
Prior to his writing career, he pursued professional interests in New York City. He has written software used extensively in the financial sector. He attended Leopold-Franzens Universität in Innsbruck, Austria, and is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame and Harvard.
In the early 1960s, small town bank president, HENRY POTTS, has maneuvered himself into a very sweet deal.
He and his philandering son-in-law are looting the Union Guaranty Bank under the guise of a cost-cutting "Unbank" marketing campaign. However, JOHN JIMPSON, the randy son-in-law and chief marketing officer, has a problem—he cannot keep his hands off the female help.
When Henry hires CLYDINE CLUMM, a platinum-blond honky-tonk angel on the rebound as his private secretary, all hell breaks loose in the executive suite, including a missing briefcase of stolen loot.
PRAISE FOR "UNBANKERLY BEHAVIOR"
"The Harlan Lane era of Little Rock's Union National Bank is the setting for this hilarious tale about the pitfalls of overreaching greed."
H. Hall McAdams, III, Former Chairman of Union National Bank in the post-Harlan Lane era.
"A wry postcard from Little Rock's checkered past."
Steven Hanley, Columnist, The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Título : Unbankerly Behavior
EAN : 9781452316642
Editorial : Daniel Koehler
El libro electrónico Unbankerly Behavior está en formato ePub
¿Quieres leer en un eReader de otra marca? Sigue nuestra guía.
Puede que no esté disponible para la venta en tu país, sino sólo para la venta desde una cuenta en Francia.
Si la redirección no se produce automáticamente, haz clic en este enlace.
Conectarme
Mi cuenta