Money for Nothing, Edward Ugel
Money for Nothing, Edward Ugel
List: $19.95 | Sale: $13.97
Club: $9.97

Money for Nothing
One Man's Journey through the Dark Side of Lottery Millions

Author: Edward Ugel

Narrator: Arthur Morey

Unabridged: 9 hr 10 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 02/20/2009


Synopsis

This wry and funny memoir tells the story of America's addiction to gambling from an astonishing angle. At age twentysix, broke and kneedeep in gambling debt, Ed Ugel serendipitously landed a job as a salesman for "The Firm," a company that offered upfront cash to lottery winners in exchange for their graduallydoledout prize money. Ed made a lucrative living by taking advantage of lottery winners weaknessesweaknesses he knew all too well. As Ed saw up close the often hilarious, sometimes sad outcome when great wealth is dropped on ordinary people who rarely have the financial savvy to keep up with the lotterywinner lifestyle, he discovered that the American Dream looks a lot like a day at the casino. And like those lottery winners, Ed struggled to find a balance in his own life as his increasing success earned him a bigger and bigger salary.

About Edward Ugel

Edward Ugel is a sales and marketing expert who spent his late twenties and early thirties working among the nation’s most infamous lottery winners and gamblers in the high-stakes lump sum industry. He writes for the Huffington Post and has also written for the New York Times and contributed to PRI’s This American Life.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Mimi

This book is funny and insightful and an emotional roller coaster. The language was too strong for me in places, despite the seedy nature of the subject matter. It was appropriate to the book but not to my sensibilities. Because of the prolific use of the *f* word I cannot give it 5 stars, but I did......more

Goodreads review by Ruanne

Excellently funny, because of the author's writing style & perspective- the topic is not inherently funny Ugel worked for an outfit that buys lottery winners' annuities when they almost inevitably find that they need cash on hand before their next payment. It's not a good deal for the lottery winner......more

Goodreads review by Ray

More of a salesman's memoirs than the interesting study of lotteries and their winners that's promised on the book jacket.......more