Company man [sound recording] / Joseph Finder.
Record details
- ISBN: 1593975953 :
- Physical Description: 14 sound discs (18 hr.) : digital ; 4 3/4 in.
- Publisher: New York : Audio Renaissance, p2005.
Content descriptions
General Note: | Compact disc. Unabridged. "Includes a bonus interview with the author and Tom Perrotta"--Cover |
Creation/Production Credits Note: | Produced by Laura Wilson. |
Participant or Performer Note: | Read by Scott Brick. |
Search for related items by subject
Genre: | Audiobooks. |
Holds
0 current holds with 0 total copies.

Library Journal Review
Company Man
Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Like Finder's previous novel (Paranoia), this thriller is set in a major American corporation. Nick Conover is the popular local boy who made good by becoming CEO of his Michigan hometown's office furniture manufacturing company. That was before the business was bought by a Boston financial holding firm. Soon Nick lays off half of the workers and becomes the most hated man in town. His family is then threatened by a stalker, who appears to be a troubled ex-employee. Nick kills this person outside his home and tries to cover it up with the aid of his head of security. Now he faces a police investigation led by a church-going detective. Further complicating Nick's life is conflict with his teenage son and an affair with a troubled young woman. The plot here is quite good, with several excellent twists and turns and interesting leading characters. Scott Brick presents the story in an engaging fashion; recommended for all audio collections.-Stephen L. Hupp, West Virginia Univ. Lib., Parkersburg (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

BookList Review
Company Man
Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Finder follows his latest corporate espionage best-seller, Paranoia 0 (2003), with a thriller that, while still set in the business world, is distinctly smaller in scale. The novel's tension centers on the hero's ethical conflict between saving his small company and laying off workers he's known since he was a kid. Nick Conover has risen from working-class origins to the position of CEO of a metal-bending company in a Grand Rapids-like town in Michigan. He has also fallen from the status of well-liked employer to that of despised boss, thanks to layoffs and outsourcing. As the book opens, Conover is dealing with personal as well as business crisis: he's a recent widower, with a preteen daughter and a teenage son, both with a palimpsest of problems; meanwhile, his house is regularly broken into and spray-painted with the words "No Hiding Place." His life keeps sinking: a deranged man breaks into the house, Conover kills him, and his longtime pal talks him into burying the body. More sickeningly suspenseful tail-diving follows, as police work demonically to tie Conover to the homicide. Finder overdoes it a bit with detail--like many hyper-realists, he has a tendency to count the knives and forks--but even so, he's written a frightfully good suspense thriller. --Connie Fletcher Copyright 2005 Booklist

Publishers Weekly Review
Company Man
Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Though Finder has written several novels-including one made into the film High Crimes-he hit bestseller lists in a big way only with last year's terrific Paranoia, so this follow-up can be considered a test of his consistency, critically and commercially. While it doesn't dazzle as Paranoia did, this is a solid, engrossing thriller that takes a few risks. Finder's primary risk is a protagonist who, while basically decent, is no paragon. Nick Conover, the youngish CEO of the Stratton Corporation, in Fenwick, Mich., has fired half of the high-end office furniture company's 10,000 employees at the bidding of new ownership in Boston. As a result, much of Fenwick hates Nick, including the person who has been breaking into his mansion and scribbling "No Hiding Place" on the walls, and who then kills the Conover family dog-presumably Andrew Stadler, a fired employee and erstwhile mental patient. When Stadler accosts Nick one night, Nick, panicking, shoots him dead, and then, under the influence of his shady corporate security director, covers up the crime. The two cops assigned to the murder prove dogged, sending Nick into a generally beleaguered state that's slightly alleviated by his new romance with, of all people, the daughter of the murdered man, but exacerbated considerably by his discovery that his Boston masters intend to sell Stratton to Chinese government interests. A thriller like this rides on its characters, and Finder creates full-blooded ones here. As in Paranoia, his understanding of byzantine corporate politics is spot on, and the novel's pacing is strong, with steady suspense. Credibility wavers as Finder heaps Job-like trials upon Nick and then ends the book on an optimistic note, but there are few thriller fans who won't stay up to finish this assured tale. Agent, Molly Friedrich. (Apr. 19) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved