<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;The year is 1920 and Bostonians from all walks of life- rich and poor young and old blue collar and white collar- are being enticed to invest their life savings with a friendly charismatic&nbsp;Italian-American by the name of Charles Ponzi. Some are well meaning while others are simply greedy. Little do they know that he is neither a financial wizard nor a boldly&nbsp;innovative thinker but a grandiose fraudster and clever con artist who has kept under wraps a Canadian prison record for bank fraud- and who now seeks to make his obsessive dream&nbsp;of amassing great wealth come true at the huge expense of thousands of innocent people.&nbsp;</p><p>Ponzi&rsquo;s incredible persuasive power to dupe foolish investors quickly extends beyond the city borders and the overall fiscal health of the entire Commonwealth is soon under close scrutiny by&nbsp;Governor Calvin Coolidge who entrusts Massachusetts Bank Commissioner Joseph C. Allen to investigate. When Allen seizes five banks and prevents Ponzi from accessing his stolen&nbsp;millions the swindler&rsquo;s fate hangs in the balance. However the full brunt of public wrath comes to bear on Allen and his wife Hart-Lester Harris Allen- and even worse their happy&nbsp;future together becomes highly questionable when a mob contract is put out on his life.&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;As told through the eyes of Hart-Lester <em>Good Night Dear Hart Good Night </em>opens with her idealistic romantic adventures as a wealthy young college graduate; her marriage to Allen and their early trials and tribulations; and how Hart and Joe&rsquo;s paths unfortunately cross with the cunning Ponzi whose own rise to power and rapid descent unfolds in alternating chapters. The book written in narrative non-fiction style is based on the author&rsquo;s interviews with Hart-Lester other eyewitness accounts and associated correspondence and newspaper and journal articles from this turbulent time in Boston&rsquo;s history. It offers a fascinating look at a bygone era as well as an examination of Ponzi the smooth talking criminal and inventor of the first &lsquo;get-rich-quick&rsquo; scheme that to this day continues to be reinvented (Bernard Madoff in 2009).&nbsp;</p>