About the Book. A timely work of singular reportage and a damning
indictment of the private equity industry told through the stories of
four American workers whose lives and communities were upended by the
ruinous effects of private equity takeovers. Private equity runs our
country, yet few Americans have any idea how ingrained it is in their
lives. Private equity controls our hospitals, daycare centers,
supermarket chains, voting machine manufacturers, local newspapers,
nursing home operators, fertility clinics, and prisons. The industry
even manages highways, municipal water systems, fire departments,
emergency medical services, and owns a growing swath of commercial and
residential real estate. Private equity executives, meanwhile, are not
only among the wealthiest people in American society, but have grown
to become modern-day barons with outsized influence on our politics
and legislation. CEOs of firms like Blackstone, Carlyle, KKR, and
Apollo are rewarded with seats in the Senate and on the boards of the
country’s most august institutions; meanwhile, entire communities
are hollowed out as a result of their buyouts. Workers lose their
jobs. Communities lose their institutions. Only private equity wins.
Acclaimed journalist Megan Greenwell’s Bad Company unearths the
hidden story of private equity by examining the lives of four
American workers that were devastated as private equity upended
their employers and communities: a Toys R Us floor supervisor, a rural
doctor, a local newspaper journalist, and an affordable housing
organizer. Taken together, their individual experiences also pull
back the curtain on a much larger project: how private equity reshaped
the American economy to serve its own interests, creating a new class
of billionaires while stripping ordinary people of their livelihoods,
their health care, their homes, and their sense of security. In the
tradition of deeply human reportage like Matthew Desmond’s Evicted,
Megan Greenwell pulls back the curtain on shadowy multibillion dollar
private equity firms, telling a larger story about how private equity
is reshaping the economy, disrupting communities, and hollowing out
the very idea of the American dream itself. Timely and masterfully
told, Bad Company is a forceful rebuke of America’s most
consequential, yet least understood economic forces. About the Author.
Megan Greenwell is a journalist who has written or edited for
publications including The New York Times, The Washington Post, New
York Magazine, WIRED, and ESPN. She is also the deputy director of
the Princeton Summer Journalism Program, a workshop and college access
initiative for students from low-income backgrounds. A California
native, she lives in Brooklyn with her husband and their pug.
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10/07/2025 Last update