New York Times Mr. Ugel's roller-coaster ride makes for dizzying, sometimes harrowing reading. Confessional, un-self-protecting and bitterly funny, it exposes the human failings of his customers, his colleagues and himself, in a personal memoir of greed and hope.
USA Today His tale is a colorfully written account by a self-proclaimed overweight, chain-smoking, Krispy Kreme doughnut-eating, fanatical gambler . . . .You will lick your chops, eager to hear the sordid woes of winners gone broke from spending sprees.
The Wall Street Journal An added twist to Mr. Ugel's sordid -- and highly engaging -- tale is the fact that he was himself a compulsive gambler. So while he was encouraging lottery winners to sell him their checks at a discount, his commissions were disappearing at the tables in Atlantic City and Las Vegas.
New York Daily News Money for Nothing is Ugel's outrageous and often very funny account of the years he spent gouging lottery winners for whatever he could take.
Details Magazine This funny, eye-opening memoir explores the American mania for gambling and the dark side of hitting the jackpot.
Kirkus Reviews A breezy, funny writer....Maybe this eye-opening book will galvanize a movement....By turns amusing and alarming. The Library Journal Ugel's natural showmanship makes for entertaining reading. He does little to pretty up his misdeeds (heck, they were legal) and offers comical vignettes of his rendezvous and run-ins with prospective clients while delivering a well-deserved scathing indictment of the government-backed lottery system.
Money for Nothing: One Man's Journey Through the Dark Side of Lottery Millions In his wry and funny memoir, Edward Ugel tells the story of America’s addiction to the lottery from an astonishing angle.
At age twenty-six, Ed found himself broke, knee-deep in debt, and moving back into his parents’ basement. It all changed, however, when he serendipitously landed a job as a salesman for a company that offered up-front cash to lottery winners in exchange for their prize money, often paid in agonizingly small annual payments, some lasting up to twenty-five years. For the better part of the ensuing decade, Ed spent his time closing deals with lottery winners, making a lucrative and legitimate—if sometimes not-so-nice—living by playing to their weaknesses…weaknesses he knew all too well.
Ed met hundreds of lottery winners and saw up-close the often hilarious, sometime sad outcome when great wealth is dropped on ordinary people. Once lottery winners realized their “dream-come-true” multimillion jackpots were not all that they were cracked up to be, Ed's job was to sell them the cash they wanted—and often needed. Winners were rarely in a position to walk the other way. As Ed learned, few of them had the financial savvy to keep up with the lottery-winner lifestyle. In fact, some just wanted their old lives back.
A charmingly neurotic gambler, Ed traveled deep into the heart of the country where he discovered the American Dream looks a lot like a day at the casino. And Ed knows casinos. In fact, his own taste for gambling gave him a unique insight into lottery winners: he intimately understood their mindset, making it that much easier to relate to them. And like lottery winners, Ed struggled to find balance in his own life as his increasing success earned him a bigger and bigger salary.
Ed Ugel takes readers inside the captivating world of lottery winners and shows us how lotteries and gambling have become deeply inscribed in every aspect of American life shaping our image of success and good fortune. Money for Nothing is a witty, wise, and often outrageously funny account of high expectations and easy money.