28 personal letters to a fictional compliance officer named Alex. Part field guide, part memoir, part mentor in print. Written from inside the rooms where the real decisions happen.
Available on Amazon, Apple Books, Kobo, Barnes & Noble, Gumroad, and 9 more
Why this book exists
Compliance literature tells you what to do. It does not tell you what it feels like to sit in a room where the CEO does not want to hear you, or how to survive when the board overrides your advice, or what to do in a small economy where the person whose transaction you flagged attends your regulator's church.
This book fills that gap. It is the first compliance book written from a Caribbean perspective for a global audience, drawing on enforcement cases from the Caribbean and West Africa alongside original compliance research. It speaks directly to compliance officers in Georgetown, Lagos, Nairobi, and Port of Spain.
Who this book is for
The vision: In ten years, this should be the book that a compliance manager in Kingston, Accra, Georgetown, or Manila gives to a new hire on their first day. Not instead of the manual. Before it.
What's inside
Before the career decision. What the profession actually demands, and whether you are ready to choose it with clear eyes.
Building your toolkit. How to read a regulation, assess risk, reason through grey areas, and carry the moral weight.
The reality nobody prepared you for. Boardroom battles, isolation, political pressure, and the compliance officer as scapegoat.
From competent to authoritative. Writing reports that get read, conducting investigations, and using technology without losing judgment.
What you leave behind. Building teams from nothing, mentoring the next generation, and what this career builds in you.
"Caius is a man, men are mortal, therefore Caius is mortal. This had always seemed to him correct as applied to Caius, but certainly not as applied to himself."
Leo Tolstoy, The Death of Ivan Ilyich — the book's opening epigraph
Advance praise
"A timely and necessary contribution that reframes compliance from a back-office function to a core pillar of institutional integrity and accountability."
International Private Sector Executive
"Theon Alleyne pulls back the curtain on the real pressures, decisions, and consequences that define the role. Compliance is often seen as a back-office function, until something goes wrong."
Author, Rogues of Wall Street (Wiley)
"A good foundation to help understand the importance of what the compliance function does, and why it is such a critical function."
Professor and Former Compliance Officer
"Letters to a Compliance Officer captures the judgment, integrity, and pressure at the heart of compliance, and explains it with the clarity and honesty you'd expect from a great mentor."
Founding Director, Association of Compliance Professionals of Guyana
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