Book Talk: Finder, ‘The Oligarch’s Daughter’
- Jim Glynn
- Dec 10, 2025
- 2 min read
I suppose that, for at least some men, marrying the daughter of a billionaire would be a dream come true. But what if that billionaire is a Russian oligarch who has agents and influence that reach everywhere? And what if, for some reason, that “lucky” man had done something that displeased his father-in-law? Well, for Paul Brightman, a very successful hedge-fund manager, that dream became a nightmare.
Joseph Finder (“The Oligarch’s Daughter,” 2025, 438 pages in hardback format) writes in two time periods to tell the before-and-after tale of the perfect marriage that has gone awry. Five years ago, Paul had a great job on Wall Street when he met Tatyana, a struggling artist, who lived in a small apartment in SoHo and eschewed all the finer things that Paul’s money could buy. In a very real way, Tatyana’s life style was part of the attraction. When Paul was young, his father taught him to live off the land in forests and mountains, in obscurity, in small towns. It was survival training, about as useful as a third leg to a successful millionaire who has learned the culture of Wall Street and developed the skill to read the stock market with uncanny accuracy.
When Paul finally pops the question and Tatyana accepts, Paul’s world turns upside down. Finder writes, “You could be married for thirty years and not really know your spouse…” And that is exactly the case in Paul and Tatyana’s romance, although it doesn’t take thirty years to learn the truth. Initially, Paul thinks that Tatyana is just being the mysterious Russian American when his friends ask her, “What do your parents do?” Tatyana’s response, “My father is in business. My stepmother is a housewife.” That answer is nominally correct, but it is an understatement of almost unimaginable proportion.


























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