

At the time of the "accident," Maria was driving Sherman's car.Īn unscrupulous civil attorney, Albert Vogel, finds out about this incident, including the information that the driver of the car was probably white, and feeds this news to Peter Fallow, a tippling British reporter at the New York daily newspaper The City Light. McCoy and his mistress flee the scene, resolved not to tell anyone, including the police. There they have an encounter with a pair of young African-American men this encounter possibly results in an accident that leaves one of the African-American men dead.

One night, after picking her up from the airport, they make a wrong turn into the Bronx. Sherman and Judy McCoy's life of elegant apartments, profligate spending, and shallow friendship plays out amid Sheraton furnishings, marble floors, and $2000 suits.īehind his wife's back, McCoy is conducting an affair with a younger woman, Maria, the socialite wife of another Park Avenue millionaire. Much of the action of the story takes place in the extremely decadent world of Park Avenue in the 1980s. He is married to Judy McCoy, and they live with their six-year-old daughter on Park Avenue while maintaining a weekend house in Southampton, Long Island. The Bonfire of the Vanities, set in New York City in the nineteen eighties, has as its protagonist Sherman McCoy, a self-dubbed "Master of the Universe." McCoy makes a million dollars per annum on Wall Street.
