What happens when unchecked ambition, addiction, and ego collide? In his raw and powerful memoir, Blind Spots: A Riches to Rags Story, former fund manager Gregory J. Blotnick opens up about the meteoric rise and devastating fall.
Published in 2025, Blind Spots is a gripping and unflinchingly honest account of a man who seemingly had it all: a privileged upbringing in Cambridge, Massachusetts, a top education and a successful career in financial services. But beneath the surface, Blotnick was struggling: emotionally, mentally, and morally.
As the COVID-19 pandemic upended global markets, his carefully constructed life began to unravel. The memoir offers readers a rare, insider view into how ego and unchecked ambition can spiral into crime, addiction, and total collapse.
From Wall Street to Rikers Island: A Cautionary Tale
At the height of his career, Gregory Blotnick was enjoying the spoils of success. He had climbed the ranks of the hedge fund world with impressive speed, first as an analyst, then as portfolio manager and founder of his own firm, Brattle Street Capital.
But as Blind Spots reveals in gut-wrenching detail, success bred overconfidence. And overconfidence opened the door to destructive behaviors: drug abuse, deceit, and, ultimately, wire fraud. Blotnick’s memoir doesn’t shy away from these hard truths. In fact, it leans into them with unwavering transparency.
“I’m not here to make excuses,” Blotnick writes. “Actions have consequences. Period.”
What Makes Blind Spots Different from Other Memoirs
In a crowded market of redemption stories and finance memoirs, Blind Spots stands out for its depth, candor, and refusal to sugarcoat. Rather than offering a sanitized or selectively edited version of events, Blotnick lays everything bare; from his darkest moments to the painful consequences that followed.
Here’s why readers and critics alike are calling Blind Spots one of the most compelling memoirs of 2025:
1. Unfiltered Honesty
There’s no self-glorification here. Blotnick admits his failures, acknowledges the damage he caused, and takes full accountability. His account of falling from grace is raw, vivid, and deeply personal.
2. Mental Health and Addiction Insight
The memoir offers a powerful look at how addiction can cloud judgment and erode ethics, even among high achievers. It’s a deeply human story about the psychological unraveling behind the headlines.
3. All Proceeds Donated to Charity
All author proceeds from Blind Spots are being donated to the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, reflecting Blotnick’s commitment to helping others who are struggling silently.
Early Reviews Praise Its Power and Grit
Since its release, Blind Spots has earned strong reviews from critics across the literary and business communities:
- Kirkus Reviews praised the book as “a raw, self-aware, and earnest remembrance,” highlighting its emotional depth and candid tone. The review commended Blotnick’s ability to shift between “self-deprecating monologues and frank discussions of privilege, money, and America’s criminal justice system.”
- Manhattan Book Review awarded the memoir 4.5 out of 5 stars, calling it “a searing, unflinching memoir of self-destruction and consequence,” and “a darkly comic, cautionary tale that lingers long after the final page.”
- US Review of Books described it as “engaging and entertaining... a well-written, thought-provoking, and incredibly honest account of a fall from grace.”
Why You Should Read Blind Spots
If you’re interested in stories about personal redemption, financial downfall, or the hidden costs of ambition, Blind Spots belongs on your reading list. It’s a powerful exploration of how blind spots, those psychological blinders we all carry, can become deadly when ignored.
For fans of self-reflective memoirs, this book offers a uniquely vulnerable take on what happens when a mind loses its moral compass...and then fights to find its way back.
Available Now
Blind Spots: A Riches to Rags Story is now available on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and other major platforms. For more information or to hear previews, visit Gregory Blotnick's YouTube, Facebook, or Instagram.