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'The Society of Friends', by Luigi Barzini, The New York Review of Books, September 22, 1966, review of The Mafia and Politics, by Michele Pantaleone. Hoodlums & History [permanent dead link ], Time Magazine, August 5, 1966, review of The Mafia and Politics, by Michele Pantaleone. (in Italian) Obituary in Italian by ANSA
Mafia Wiseguys: The Mob That Took on the Feds. SP Books. ISBN 978-1-56171-195-6. Orlando, Leoluca (2003). Fighting the Mafia and Renewing Sicilian Culture. Encounter Books. ISBN 978-1-893554-81-8. Schneider, Peter T.; Schneider, Jane C. (11 February 2003). Reversible Destiny: Mafia, Antimafia, and the Struggle for Palermo. University of ...
The author of the book is Malcolm Gladwell, an English-born Canadian journalist, author, and public speaker. [1] [2] [3] In 2016, Gladwell started Revisionist History, a history-focused podcast that "re-examines something from the past – an event, a person, an idea, even a song – and asks whether we got it right the first time". [4]
(The Mafia) truly formed in the 1930s but became unraveled in the 1990s for a range of reasons, including the decision by Rudy Giuliani (then U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York ...
When Corruption Was King: How I Helped the Mob Rule Chicago, Then Brought the Outfit Down is a memoir written by Robert Cooley, a lawyer who once worked for Mafia members in Chicago but eventually turned in his former clients. The book is co-written by journalist Hillel Levin and was published by Perseus Publishing in 2004.
The book centers around Shorto's grandfather, Russ, son of an Italian immigrant who works with the mob in Johnstown, Pennsylvania.During Prohibition in the United States, Russ ran alcohol and built a "small city empire" [8] around Johnstown, with money going to the Mafia in New York City and some to the mob in Pittsburgh.
Blogcritics, in a November 2009 review by Scott Deitche wrote, "Breakshot joins the canon of better Mafia books, and among the subgenre of Mafia tell-alls, it's one of the strongest in recent years". [7] The OC Weekly wrote that the book "sheds new light on Newport Beach’s dark past as a haven for Italian mobsters and Colombian cartel figures ...
The Valachi Papers is a 1968 biography written by Peter Maas, telling the story of former mafia member Joe Valachi, a low-ranking member of the New York–based Genovese crime family, who was the first ever government witness coming from the American Mafia itself. His account of his criminal past revealed many previously unknown details of the ...