In A Stone for Danny Fisher Harold Robbins wrote of an ugly part of New York, where flick-knives and bare fists were the passport to wealth and position. In Never Leave Me he shows that the oak-panelled offices of big business, and the expense-account frolics of Madison Avenue hucksters, are not very far removed from Danny Fisher's jungle world. Life in New York's hard-boiled upper income brackets is just as vicious, cruel and deadly as life on the streets of the lower East Side. The smooth words, the expensive clothes, the plush backgrounds, only serve to mask the same frantic drive for material success, and the motto 'I've got mine, to hell with everyone else.' Never Leave Me is the memorable story of one man from this world and how he almost tore his life to pieces in a frenzy of passion and a hunger for power.