'David Lynch's book is an amazing story of rampaging greed, dirty doings and even adulterous sex!Old Mother Ireland doffs her peasant's garb and emerges as a provocative siren, infecting the Irish with diseased materialism. Along with a concise history of Ireland, Lynch makes even economics funny and fascinating.' - Malachy McCourt 'A brilliant set of insights into the true and completely general nature of 'crony capitalism'. Close connections between politicians, bankers, and property developers brought Ireland great apparent prosperity -- while really creating the conditions for a huge and horrible crash. Lynch is optimistic that Ireland can rise again and find a more robust model for growth. Let's hope he is right.' - Simon Johnson, Professor, MIT Sloan School of Management and author of 13 Bankers: The Wall Street Takeover and the Next Financial Meltdown 'David Lynch's book will enrage, enlighten, and sadden you. His superbly written account of what really happened in Ireland during the boom of the Celtic Tiger and the ensuing bust is, to be sure, a story about Ireland. But it is also a cautionary tale for all of us. The next time somebody tells you that the market can only go up, run away and re-read this book!' - Terry Golway, columnist, The Irish Echo and author of So Others Might Live 'Lynch marvelously weaves together politics, history, and religion to explain the incredible economic and social transformation that has swept Ireland over the past three decades and the deep financial crisis that Ireland is grappling with today.' - Kenneth S. Rogoff, Professor of Economics, Harvard University and coauthor of This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly 'David Lynch has produced a terrific read -- a hair-raising gallop through the hills and valleys of modern day finance. After reading this book, you'll never think about Ireland -- or global financial markets - in quite the same way.' - David M. Smick, author of The World Is Curved: Hidden Dangers to the Global Economy 'A tour de force of reportage and analysis. As much social anthropology as economic forensics, it is a cautionary tale of post-colonial success and excess. As cold as the eye he casts upon the land of his forebears is, Lynch retains an unmistakable affection for Ireland and a confidence that it can change, change utterly, for the better.' - Kevin Cullen, columnist and former Dublin bureau chief, The Boston Globe '!a compelling and vividly written account of what happened' The Scotsman ' For those seeking a punchy account of Ireland's rise and fall, with enjoyable diversions into music, literature and popular culture, this book is an excellent place to start.' - Steve Coulter, British Politics and Policy at LSE, Feb 2011 'Well-written, crisp and without jargons, the book makes an excellent reading, even to a non-economic reader. It is a mixture of Irish economy and history, and culture, an inter-mingling of it that adds flavor to narration.' - Organiser (India) 'J.lynch's book is an excellent introduction to how far the Irish travelled from the 1980s to present.' - Survival