The Billionaire’s Vinegar, the instant New York Times bestseller.

It was the most expensive bottle of wine ever sold.

In 1985, at a heated auction by Christie’s of London, a 1787 Chateau Lafite Bordeaux—unearthed in a Paris cellar and supposedly owned by Thomas Jefferson—went for $156,000 to a member of the Forbes family. The discoverer of the bottle was Hardy Rodenstock, a pop-band manager turned wine collector with a knack for finding extremely old and exquisite wines. But rumors about the bottle soon arose. Why wouldn’t Rodenstock reveal the exact location where it had been found? Was it part of a smuggled Nazi hoard? Or did his reticence conceal an even darker secret? Pursuing the story from London to Zurich to Munich and beyond, Benjamin Wallace offers a mesmerizing history of wine and of Jefferson’s wine-soaked days in France. Suspenseful, witty, and thrillingly strange, this is the vintage tale of what could be the most elaborate con since the Hitler diaries.

Praise for The Billionaire’s Vinegar:

“This is a captivating tale, even if you care nothing about wine.” — The Wall Street Journal

“This is a gripping story, expertly handled by Benjamin Wallace who writes with wit and verve, drawing the reader into a subculture strewn with eccentrics and monomaniacs... Full of detail that will delight wine lovers. It will also appeal to anyone who merely savours a great tale, well told.” — The Economist

“The season's wine reading cannot get off to a better start than with The Billionaire's Vinegar, one of the rare books on wine that transcends the genre... Though the story is the collector's world, the subject is also greed and how it can contort reality to fit one's desires. It's been optioned for Hollywood. I hope the movie's as good as the book.” — The New York Times

“Splendid...A delicious mystery that winds through musty European cellars, Jefferson-era France and Monticello, engravers' shops, a nuclear physics lab, rival auction houses and legendary multi-day tastings conducted by the shadowy German who had discovered the Jefferson collection...Ripe for Hollywood.” — USA Today

“It is the fine details—the bouquet, the body, the notes, the finish–that make this book such a lasting pleasure, to be savored and remembered long after the last page is turned. Ben Wallace has told a splendid story just wonderfully, his touch light and deft, his instinct pitch-perfect. Of all the marvelous legends of the wine trade, this curiously unforgettable saga most amply deserves the appellation: a classic.” — Simon Winchester, author of The Professor and the Madman

“[T]his thoroughly researched, engagingly written book presents the evidence from both sides... Full of entertaining real life personalities, it's a brilliant analysis of the world of fine and rare wines. It deserves to win every prize going.” — The Guardian

“... fine writing, great reporting, and a story so delicious you could have it for dessert.” — Fortune

The Billionaire’s Vinegar is the ultimate page-turner. Written with literary intelligence, it has a cast of characters like something out of Fawlty Towers meets The Departed. It takes you into a subculture so deep and delicious, you can almost taste the wine that turns so many seemingly rational people into madmen. It is superb nonfiction.” — Buzz Bissinger, author of Friday Night Lights

“...[a] gem of a book...” — The Washington Times

“... truly riveting... For anyone familiar with the wine world, the book will provide extraordinary enjoyment, more or less as beach material. But this book has great potential to cross over to a mainstream audience... In some ways, the most interesting aspect of the story is how people want so much to believe in things, and so, they do. That is really the take-away message of the book, and Wallace has done a lovely job of presenting it.” — Barron’s

“This book has no right to be as exciting as it is.” — Good Morning America

“a superb storyteller... engaging and vivid, Wallace's prose is supremely well composed, and turns a complex web of commercial transactions—albeit an intriguing one—into a mystery of Hitchcockian proportions.” — Decanter

“... masterfully unravel[s] a fast-paced tale of power, deception, and oenophilic excess... has the feverish momentum of a page-turner... offering an unprecedented portrait of a case that rocked an impossibly exclusive world to its foundation.” — Boldtype

“Benjamin Wallace's brilliant new book is a work of carefully-researched fact, rather than fiction, but it's not short of drama, intrigue or remarkable personalities... a fascinating, page-flipping mystery... a forensic, and frequently amusing, examination of the world of fine and rare wine” — Wine & Spirit

“... brings together the disparate themes of wealth, greed, narcissism, ego, and fraud, with a dollop of history and some nifty detective work thrown in for good measure... Wallace's book deserves the broad readership at which it is clearly aiming, reaching far beyond the confines of the wine trade and wine collectors.” — The World of Fine Wine

“...a rich depiction of the history of wine, from the time of Thomas Jefferson until today—its prestige, its chemistry, its recurring susceptibility to fraudulence... Wallace reveals a fondness for many of the interesting characters populating his book, and a reporter's fascination with his subject.... There is delicious insider's gossip aplenty in this book, enough to keep any serious wine aficionado turning the pages. And for those with a more casual interest, Wallace's centuries-spanning narrative and sharp eye for detail make the book a fun and informative read. I highly recommend it—read it now, before the movie comes out.” — ImbibeMagazine.com

“... so well written that it is an absolute pleasure to read... [a] profound look into the world of wine collecting...” — Dr. Vino’s Wine Blog

“a modern nonfiction who done it... transports the reader back and forth through time and across the sea, from the boardrooms of 20th century publishing tycoons to 18th century France and the young American nation... Pull the cork on 'The Billionaire's Vinegar' and you will sip at it, enjoying it as it develops, until every last drop is drunk.” — The Gloucester Daily Times

“... a tale peopled with famous and infamous characters, plunder and plonk and more than a dash of hoax and history.” — Reuters

“... a briskly written tale of intrigue and deceit...” — Hemispheres

“... nicely peels back the covers of a world most of us will never see.” — The Dallas Morning News

“Misplaced trust, gullibility, vanity, chicanery and old-fashioned greed occupy center stage in this engrossing tale... Wallace meticulously unravels [Hardy] Rodenstock's inexorable exposure as a fraud...” — The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

“Terrific” — Slate

“Captivating” — The New York Times Book Review

“Entertaining.” — The Washington Post

“What people will be talking about” — GQ

“a richly intriguing tale” — Library Journal

“An old bottle of wine is rare, but a ripping good mystery about one is rarer still... Wallace's narrative leads us into a world of heiresses, celebrities, rogues, bankers, tomb raiders, dilettantes, villains, Arab potentates, millionaires and, as the tale darkens, forensic scientists, glass and handwriting experts, Jefferson scholars, FBI agents and federal court judges... No wonder actor-producer Will Smith is making a movie based on the book... For those who can't stomach another wine guide, The Billionaire's Vinegar makes learning about wine palatable... Wallace brings a reporter's discipline to both the depth of his research and to the even-handed treatment of his findings.”
The Globe and Mail (Canada)

“Unsurprisingly, residents of this small and rarefied world are quirky, impassioned individuals, and Wallace tells their tales and reveals their flaws with a directness that avoids sympathy, but never descends to ridicule... The book handles a dozen tangential plots with Dickensian ease... The Billionaire's Vinegar is the rare book that transcends its topic, reaching out to anyone interested in a good mystery, while at the same time going into enough detail to be of interest to a serious wine drinker.” — Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

“I thoroughly enjoyed the book... fascinating...” — Robert M. Parker, Jr.

“A great read... I think most readers will enjoy the detail and, like me, learn much from it... All in all this book is thoroughly recommended...” — Jancis Robinson

“Fascinating... With plenty of detail, richly quirky characters, and restrained pacing, Wallace introduces us to the rarefied world of high-end wine. Part detective story, part wine history, this is one juicy tale, even for those with no interest in the fruit of the vine... Luckily for readers, Wallace has made the unmasking of this deceit as delicious as a true vintage Lafite.” — Businessweek

“An astonishing tale of intrigue, greed, pride and ego... Is this book worth your time and effort to find and read? Undoubtedly.” — Dayton Daily News

“Combin[es] years of in-depth journalistic research with solid storytelling skills of plot, pacing, character development and an eye for the telling detail and engaging anecdote... for anyone with at least a curiosity about precious old wines and the love of a good story, this well-crafted piece of journalism may prove as intriguing and enjoyable as a fine old Bordeaux.” — The Seattle Times

“A rich blend of historical narrative and page-flipping mystery that will keep both oenophiles and teetotalers riveted.” — Philadelphia Magazine

“A page-turner…What makes Wallace's book worth reading is the way he fleshes out the tale with entertaining digressions into Jefferson's wine adventures, how to fake wines (who knew a shotgun blast could make a bottle look old?) and dead-on portraits of several major wine personalities who intersected unhappily with the wines.” — Bloomberg

“Wallace’s depiction of rabid oenophiles staging almost decadent events to swill rare wine, knowingly depleting the reserves, are as much fun as the mystery.” — The New York Daily News

“[Wallace] offers a revealing look at the influx into the esoteric field of wine connoisseurship of major-player egos and big money, which created a tricky and rarified market similar to that for expensive art—and encouraged fakes in both…There's no denying the appeal of this enthrallingly mad and recondite subject.” — Kirkus Reviews

“A riveting wine history, wine mystery, and more” — Food & Wine

“Wallace sips the story slowly, taking leisurely digressions into techniques for faking wine and detecting same with everything from Monticello scholarship to nuclear physics. He paints a colorful backdrop of eccentric oenophiles, decadent tastings and overripe flavor rhetoric… Investigating wines so old and rare they could taste like anything, he playfully questions the very foundations of connoisseurship.”
Publishers Weekly

“Call it wine noir... a reminder that great wine should be consumed, not just collected.” — Men’s Health