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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
July 1, 2002 -
Formats
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OverDrive Listen audiobook
- ISBN: 9781593162658
- File size: 162476 KB
- Duration: 05:38:29
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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AudioFile Magazine
This anthology of true crime stories allows members of crime families and undercover agents to tell all about their experience with the Mob. In this anthology, we hear from Donnie Brasco, who tells how he infiltrated the Mob and lived as a "wise guy" for five years. A hit man who was active in the 1970s and '80s tells about what types of jobs he performed, and other tales of murder and violence. A different narrator reads each story, providing narrative and characterizations. Each narrator is listed on the packaging and announced on the tape. The narrative style is matter of fact and retrospective, mimicking an interview, rather than a dramatization. If you're interested in criminals and social deviance, this audiobook is for you. M.B.K. (c) AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine -
Publisher's Weekly
November 5, 2001
In the 16th title in the Adrenaline series (Adrenaline 2001: The Year's Best Stories of Adventure and Survival; etc.), series editor Willis presents a baker's dozen of bits of fiction and nonfiction, confessions and wiretapped confabs that are the best of the genre from authors Puzo, Pileggi, Maas and others. The families involved—Gambino, Bonanno, et al.—are no less renowned. Two parts nostalgia and one part investigative intrigue, the book serves up platefuls of stick-to-the-ribs tales of gangland murders, wise guys, heists and stool pigeons, delving fully into the structures and workings of the American Mafia. Standouts include an excerpt from Joseph D. Pistone's book about his shadowy life deep under cover as Donnie Brasco; instructions on administering a hit from the 1973 autobiography Killer, by "Joey," written with David Fisher; and a selection from Pileggi's Casino. Willis, in his introduction, describes his fascination with the criminal lifestyle, but refuses to glorify it; he confesses that he both fears and pities mobsters. Indeed, this pity for today's waning Mafia is echoed in what "Joey" says about hit men in 1973: "xcept in New York there hasn't been much work lately, so I guess you could call us a dying breed." The familiarity in much Mafiana doesn't seem to deter fans (whether readers or viewers, e.g., of The Sopranos), and the engrossing fiction and true crime tales collected here will whet many readers' appetite. Photos.
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