Confident Women e-bog
90,41 DKK
(inkl. moms 113,01 DKK)
A thoroughly entertaining and darkly humorous roundup of historys notorious but often forgotten female con artists and their bold, outrageous scamsby the acclaimed author of Lady Killers.From Elizabeth Holmes and Anna Delvey to Frank Abagnale and Charles Ponzi, audacious scams and charismatic scammers continue to intrigue us as a culture. As Tori Telfer reveals in Confident Women, the art of th...
E-bog
90,41 DKK
Forlag
Harper Perennial
Udgivet
23 februar 2021
Længde
352 sider
Genrer
Biography: general
Sprog
English
Format
epub
Beskyttelse
LCP
ISBN
9780062956040
A thoroughly entertaining and darkly humorous roundup of historys notorious but often forgotten female con artists and their bold, outrageous scamsby the acclaimed author of Lady Killers.From Elizabeth Holmes and Anna Delvey to Frank Abagnale and Charles Ponzi, audacious scams and charismatic scammers continue to intrigue us as a culture. As Tori Telfer reveals in Confident Women, the art of the con has a long and venerable tradition, and its female practitioners are some of the bestor worst. In the 1700s in Paris, Jeanne de Saint-Rmy scammed the royal jewelers out of a necklace made from six hundred and forty-seven diamonds by pretending she was best friends with Queen Marie Antoinette.In the mid-1800s, sisters Kate and Maggie Fox began pretending they could speak to spirits and accidentally started a religious movement that was soon crawling with female con artists. A gal calling herself Loreta Janeta Velasquez claimed to be a soldier and convinced people she worked for the Confederacyor the Union, depending on who she was talking to. Meanwhile, Cassie Chadwick was forging paperwork and getting banks to loan her upwards of $40,000 by telling people she was Andrew Carnegies illegitimate daughter. In the 1900s, a 40something woman named Margaret Lydia Burton embezzled money all over the country and stole upwards of forty prized show dogs, while a few decades later, a teenager named Roxie Ann Rice scammed the entire NFL. And since the death of the Romanovs, women claiming to be Anastasia have been selling their stories to magazines. What about today? Spoiler alert: these artists are still conning.Confident Women asks the provocative question: Where does chutzpah intersect with a uniquely female pathologyand how were these notorious women able to so spectacularly dupe and swindle their victims?