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Damaged Goods

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Damaged Goods

By: Oliver Shah
Narrated by: Oliver Shah
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About this listen

Penguin Audio presents Damaged Goods, by Oliver Shah.

In March 2015, British businessman and the chairman of Arcadia Group Sir Philip Green sold BHS for £1 to Retail Acquisitions, owned by Dominic Chappell, a serial bankrupt who filed BHS for administration shortly after. By April 2016, BHS had debts of £1.3bn, including a pensions deficit of £571m.

Damaged Goods follows Green's journey to the big time, the sale of BHS and the subsequent investigation that concluded with Green paying £363m to the Pensions Regulator.

In Damaged Goods, Oliver Shah, the award-winning journalist who first broke the story, shines a light on Green's past and Arcadia's uncertain future; this is the extraordinary account of the retail magnate Sir Philip Green's life and his relationship with the high street.

©2018 Oliver Shah (P)2018 Penguin Audio
Business Business Ethics Corruption & Misconduct Entertainment & Celebrities Celebrity Thought-Provoking Inspiring
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Outstandingly good

Well constructed and presented by the author.
The issues raised in the BHS saga remain current today in the backdrop of challenges to retailers in the high street. Hope no more sociopaths involved.
A great listen and highly recommended

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A good case for Communism

The sheer greed and avarice of Phillip Green are detailed in this work. Deals are related involving millions and billions of pounds, shops are bought stripped of their assets and sold on or closed. The pension fund seems to be a source of ready money. In all this the workers in the businesses are cast aside whilst Green and his cronies move ever onward. It makes one wonder whether communism is not a viable alternative.
This is a well written account by Oliver Shah but sometimes needs a lot of concentration to find out what is going on . The narration is not of the best and in some parts drops out altogether. The author’s voice is a bit too low in the register for comfortable listening.

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Brilliant!

Superb book. A really good listen and so much I was not aware of. Must listen

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stories so crazy it could almost be fiction

amazing insight into a commical group of people who are almost charactures of themselves .

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    5 out of 5 stars

his sleeves are too long

or, would you buy a second-hand car from this man? a very interesting and exhausting book which filled me with disgust. I note that the wife/partner turned out equally culpable but seemed to have managed to only have gained a reputation for inordinate bad taste and spending money. both followed the well-trodden path of becoming totally detached from reality.
the bullying methods used by green reminded me of the school playground with minions hanging on his coat tails, sickening. of course all bullies are cowards at heart.
NO, I would not buy a car from him and yes, his tailor is rubbish.

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Stellar read: An MBA course of UK retail and corporate easing

What a story. A lot of hard work has gone into this over a lot years.

Apart from all the swearing it should be used as an MBA text book lesson on greed, vanity, competition and some of the best one liners ever written in business.

The writer obviously loves and hates the subject but there seems to be a balanced view given.

Fully recommend this book.

We’ll done

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Very good !!

Excellent insight into the world of big business.shows you how green worked and hes now paying the price!

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Fascinating story brilliantly told

It's rare that business books - or any written by specialists journalists - stray beyond the jargon and in-jokes that rattle harmoniously around within their sectors understood only by the cliques who populate them. But in 'Damaged Goods...', Sunday Times business editor Oliver Shah has crafted a narrative that weaves together comedic and dramatic threads charting the decay of Britain's favourite past-time (shopping). Shah does this in a way that engages and fascinates the reader, even if he or she isn't one of the million or so regulars who picks up Shah's reports in the newspaper he's worked at since 2010.

You get the sense that this book allowed him to explore prose with the level of colour and curiosity that the deadlines and tight word limits of newspaper journalism do not always allow, and this is part of what makes the book such a success.

What also makes the narrative work is the meticulous research and the effortless, often laugh-at-loud funny, prose that sets up the key characters in and around Green who, despite his lavish lifestyle swimming in yachts and cars, comes across as a Poundshop Kray-wannabe. Shah would have definitely needed to wash his mouth out with soap after reading the audiobook which contains many hilarious, expletive-laden rants that Green is notorious for dishing out. But the reading is energised and engaging, making the book a very easy listen.

When history comes to judge the huge step-change we are seeing at the crossroads of consumerism, retail, technology and demographic change, the subject matter in this book will be crucial. What's clear however, is that the story of Green and the death of the high street - in particular Arcadia and Topshop - is far from over. Hopefully Green won't succeed in his threat to throw Shah "out of the f------ window" and he'll happily be able to update things in future editions.

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Filthy dirty greens

If you had any doubt about the repugnance of Philip Green and his wife, this book will set you straight. Interesting reading if you want to understand why Green is a revolting, pension grabbing scumbag and why his wife is shallower that a puddle of water. Towards the end I felt I just couldn't listen to any more. Well done to Oliver Shah for the research and dedication he's put into this book. Well worth a listen

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Great Book

Great Book and insight into Peter Green. Advise to anyone interested in the Super Rich

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