![]() It seems the Bradford Bourbon Company is in serious financial trouble, the depth of which has yet to be plumbed by a Wall Street friend Lane has persuaded to go through the books. Lane finds the business in shambles from his father’s reckless decisions, unthinkable after 200 years in Kentucky, a product with a sound reputation. Jonathan Tulane Baldwine, the youngest son known as “Lane,” a reformed playboy and gambler, steps in as family leader in Edward’s stead. ![]() When his father refused to pay the ransom, Edward suffered the consequences, his broken body a testament to the abuse that left him seriously diminished, with a bitter heart. ![]() When the head of the family is found dead-presumably a suicide-this man of low standards and high expectation is not mourned by his son or daughter, his wife long ensconced in her bedroom in a drug-addled state.Įldest son Edward, the natural heir, is unable to assume management of the business, physically and emotionally damaged from a kidnapping in South America. In a sequel to The Bourbon Kings, Ward continues the saga of a wealthy Kentucky family beset by a plague of riches, with a powerful scion, William Wyatt Baldwine, Chief Executive Officer of the Bradford Bourbon Company. Ward's *The Angels' Share (The Bourbon Kings)* ![]()
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