The New York Journal of Books felt that the book provided "a really insightful look into the world of high finance, and the best explanation of the Madoff fraud", but found that it had "too much ... about Markopolos himself, his family, his friends".[2]Publishers Weekly called it "an astonishing true-life whodunit", with the repercussions of Madoff's downfall serving as "a satisfying conclusion";[3]LexisNexis, however, faulted Markopolos for being overly critical of the SEC,[4] and at the Wall Street Journal, Richard Tofel (while conceding the quality of Markopolos's investigative work) stated that—by describing his own fears of retribution from organized crime—Markopolos "sheds more light than he intends on just why no one would listen".[5]
References
^No One Would Listen: A True Financial Thriller, Hardcover. ISBN0470553731.
^No One Would Listen, reviewed by Andrew Rosenbaum, published no later than May 28, 2016 (earliest version on archive.org); retrieved July 31, 2017