“An absolutely riveting tour of the American economic system, told through the lives of four people whose jobs were swallowed by the beast we call private equity. Greenwell has single-handedly exposed the hidden economic machine that increasingly runs—and ruins—our lives. This bombshell of a book is indispensable to understand the economic forces running roughshod over America today.” — Christopher Leonard, New York Times bestselling author of Kochland and The Lords of Easy Money
“In Bad Company, one of our finest journalists embarks on a harrowing, humane inquiry into the state of American business and comes away with a classic statement on 21st century culture. It’s wonderful.” — Zachary D. Carter, New York Times bestselling author of The Price of Peace
“A hard and eloquent look at players who have far too long escaped public scrutiny.” — Eliza Griswold, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Amity and Prosperity and Circle of Hope
“With clear-eyed writing and honed investigative chops, Greenwell lays bare the private equity industry’s utter contempt for the rest of us. This is a book for this moment, a kind of cri de coeur. Reading these deeply reported tales left me shaking with anger.” — Alex Kotlowitz, award-winning author of There Are No Children Here and An American Summer
“Urgent and revelatory, Megan Greenwell leads us deep into the opaque world of private equity, where billion-dollar firms quietly seize control of the institutions and services we rely on. With wit, ferocity, and razor-sharp insight, Greenwell transforms what could be a dry financial story into a gripping mystery: how do these firms generate massive returns even as the businesses they buy collapse? Who, exactly, is cashing in on the wreckage? The result is both infuriating and galvanizing, a tour de force of investigative journalism that makes the harms of private equity not just legible but visceral.” — Brian Goldstone, author of There Is No Place for Us
“A beautifully written debut that takes a mostly abstract concept—private equity—and drills down to the human level, showing how a hyper-focus on profit is making life harder for everyone and destroying wide swaths of American life. The result is a crucial read that you won’t want to put down.” — Roxanna Asgarian, award-winning author of We Were Once a Family