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American gangster

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Frank Lucas ha trascorso gli anni Settanta rifornendo di droga la sua Harlem. Con un piccolo dettaglio: per fare arrivare la polvere bianca sulle strade di NY ha usato le bare dei marines uccisi in Vietnam. Si dice che una partita di eroina particolarmente abbondante sia tornata in America con lo stesso aereo di Henry Kissinger, in visita in Cambogia. Lucas, che all'epoca guadagnava un milione di dollari al giorno, ha fatto la vita del gran signore, ma è anche stato capace di uccidere un uomo con le sue mani. E ancora oggi, dopo ventisette anni di carcere, basta un lampo improvviso nei suoi occhi per terrorizzare chiunque...
American Gangster è la sua storia, ma è anche la storia di NY, esplorata con la cura e l'amore profondo del grande reporter di strada. Dal mondo della prostituzione d'alto bordo agli angoli piú malfamati del Lower East Side; dalle strade notturne battute da improvvisati taxi driver, fino al nuovo re delle Triadi di Chinatown.
Un crudo, esplosivo mosaico di storia criminale di New York che ridisegna lo skyline della Grande Mela, o della Città Nuda.

196 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2007

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About the author

Mark Jacobson

26 books18 followers

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5 stars
34 (8%)
4 stars
78 (19%)
3 stars
170 (43%)
2 stars
87 (22%)
1 star
22 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 42 reviews
Profile Image for Jim.
Author 7 books2,089 followers
did-not-finish
April 5, 2018
I'm not going to rate this because it was well done, but I just hated the subject. I got about 25% in & just couldn't take it any more.
Profile Image for Conner.
211 reviews3 followers
August 16, 2019
This had the potential to be really good. I could have enjoyed all of the stories about NYC but most of them were not very interesting. I bought this book years ago and honestly just plowed through it to get it out of the way.
Profile Image for Graham P.
338 reviews48 followers
August 15, 2016
30 years of New York City journalism separated into sections, "Uptown", "Downtown", "All Around Town," culling the best of Mark Jacobson's work for the Village Voice and New York Magazine. The earlier stuff is essential reading for those wanting to envision what the city was like in the 1970s. "Sleaze Out of East Fourteenth Street" captures the legendary dirty vibe of transients, vagabonds, and hustlers living day to day. "Ghost Shadows on the Chinatown Streets" details Chinatown and the ever-changing power struggles for kingpin status. "Night Shifting for the Hip Fleet" is a gritty expose on the taxi drivers running the graveyard shift and how existentially wrought the job is. This is bleak and wonderful shit. Later works show more detailed character exposition (the piece of Wynton Marsalis reads like a 22 page blow-job, flattery on overdrive), but the entry that nails it, with heart and precision, is "Mom Sell's The House." It is one of the finest pieces about the old neighborhood long gone, and the people with it, most importantly, family. A sentimental, brave nugget, and it's worth the ticket and then some. No surprise that Richard Price wrote the intro to this collection. Jacobson and Price share these streets and know them well.
Profile Image for Pete.
156 reviews1 follower
January 10, 2013
I looked the movie with Denzel Washington, so I thought i would read the book. Well it is just one of many short articles about things or people in New York. Each story was very different, but well written and enjoyable. However, I was expecting more on the American Gangster point, so that was a bit of a let down. Still an enjoyable read though.
Profile Image for Shaun.
120 reviews
June 21, 2018
A collection of short stories about people living their lives in New York City.
Profile Image for Toby Ruder.
40 reviews
July 26, 2020
I’m not really sure what the point of this book was. I was daft enough to miss in the title “and other tales of New York” thinking it was the background story of the main character in the movie, but it was in fact a collection of magazine articles about random subjects rehashed under the cloak of the movie. The Frank Lucas article was good but some of the others were just pointless a case in point, the stigmata priest.. sounds interesting, goes nowhere and is incredibly dull. Again, I’m not really sure who this book was aimed at.
1,668 reviews5 followers
October 1, 2020
This is a delightful collection of magazine articles on a variety of topics. Highly recommended.
84 reviews
August 8, 2023
Only the first story is worth reading the rest are terrible. Not a fan of this author’s writing style.
Profile Image for Amy Oechsner.
537 reviews2 followers
October 6, 2025
I’m sure someone might like this book, but it was not for me at all.
536 reviews
Read
January 28, 2010
Interesting, but it is likely not what people expect.

The part about Frank Lucas, is only about a third of the book, the rest are devoted to essays the author wrote for various NYC magazines/newspapers.

The section on Frank Lucas is not a typical "true crime" written as long journalistic piece with lots of dates, places. Jacobson does give a background for what happened, but he is also attempting to convey more about Lucas' personality, overall it reads more like a feature piece.

The other pieces range from great to not great.


The author does have an ability/language to really give a feel for NYC street life, especially in the 1970s during, after the 60's/riots but before the yuppie 80's/Rent Era in Alphabet City/crack wars and way before Disney came to Times Square. The best stories are those that convey this time and/or the "other side" of the city, from the description fo 14th St. and 3rd Ave. before the Village became full of condos and pushed rents higher in this area bordering the Lower East Side; a stand-up club in Sheep's Head Bay; the rise and fall of a high end pimp; the last Irish Cowboy bank robber.

Other stories are a little weaker, the piece about 9/11 comes across as far left conispiracy screed, interviews with a firefighter and a widow keep from coming across as completely offensive, but it is also annoying because it is much more about national politics and not so much about NYC itself.

The piece about Winton Marsalis is great, if you enjoy jazz and are aware of the civil war within jazz between the "classicists" like Marsalis and the more modern, but if you do not know and do not care, it is kind of dull and again really does not convey much about NYC.

The piece about his family home and being a Yankee hater are good and give a sense of not only growing up in NYC but the generations have that come before.

Overall good, though be warned that Jacobson at times does suffer from the aging baby boomer disease--trying to convince us he is still hip while at the same time complaining how thing use to be.
Profile Image for Brendan.
745 reviews22 followers
February 10, 2010
Jacobson specialized in "slice of life" features for New York periodicals. His stories have won numerous awards and spawned a number of other texts, including the television show Taxi and the feature film based on the title article mentioned above. Jacobson brings an eye for detail and description to his interactions with the characters populating the city, informing his writing with crisp histories and choice quotes. It's a good read. A few extra thoughts:

* "American Gangster" - Jacobson does a great job with the title story, balancing the line between describing the man, Frank Lucas, who went from a rural Virginia (?) upbringing to a lavish New York drug kingpin's lifestyle. Lucas comes off as a very likeable man who also happens to be extremely vicious. Most telling is the scene in which Lucas tries to get Jacobson to sign over all the rights to the American Gangster story--it's intense and Jacobson doesn't pull punches in describing the fear he felt.
* My favorite piece is Jacobson's long dissection of 9/11 Truthers, which he does with a wary but even-handed eye, giving voice to the doubts they harbor without giving way to the general craziness many of the conspiracy theorists end up displaying. It's a narrow balance to weave, but he does it with aplomb.
* He also has a number of pieces that focus on the old New York, that try to capture the seedy, down-in-the-dumps glory of the city in its 1970s worst. It's the New York I saw on television as a kid watching Night Court; it's a grim place that Jacobson describes with both nostalgia and frank acknowledgment of its flaws. Among the best of these are the one about the cigar shop and the one documenting the seediest street corner in New York.

Hillgartner does a great job, giving some of the characters distinctive accents to highlight their ethnicity (in a polyglot city like New York, where accents are as much a part of the landscape as the smells) without descending into cartoonish parody.
Profile Image for Nicole.
364 reviews10 followers
December 29, 2011
American Gangster: And Other Tales of New York is a collection of essays and articles by Mark Jacobson, and the inspiration for the movie with Denzel Washington. Initially, I was really enjoying tales detailing the lives of gangsters, accounts of trendy hangouts and crazy New Yorkers... who doesn't like hearing stories about crazy people? Overall, I enjoyed the stories... right up to the point where Jacobson begins discussing September 11 and the (unbelievable) theory that not only was the U.S. government aware of the attacks at the World Trade Center, but they were actually the masterminds behind the attacks. At that point, Jacobson totally lost me. Who in their right mind would believe the government masterminded the worst terrorist attack of the 21st century? I had never heard this claim before... ever. Granted, I don't live in the land of the crazies, but I don't think even politicians would sink that low. I was aghast and horrified and generally disgusted. Thanks to that story, I was unable to enjoy any of the other stories (even the one about the whore house) or Jacobson's masterful use of the written word.
Profile Image for Shirley.
65 reviews5 followers
January 2, 2008
It's a collection of articles that were published in the Village Voice and New York magazine from the 1970s onwards. The articles are about interesting people and places in New York and written by New Yorker Mark Jacobson. His collection is divided into three parts: Uptown, Downtown, and All Around the Town.

One of the articles is called The American Gangster, a.k.a. The Haint of Harlen the Frank Lucas Story which is going to be released as a movie staring Denzel Washington and Russel Crow in early January 2008. The writer interviewed Frank Lucas in 2000 which was many years after Lucas' heyday as the drug kingpin in New York. Lucas was famous for smuggling heroin in the coffins of soldiers from Vietnam to the US during the war.

The articles are very well written and entertaining. Some of the more interesting article titles are "From the Annals of Pre-gentrification: Sleaze-out on East Fourteenth Street" (Village Voice in 1977) and "Ghost Shadoes on the Chinatown Streets" (Village Voice 1977).

There is also a article on the conspiracy theories on 9/11 which was amusing.

If you want to know about the real New York and some of the weird and dodgy characters there, then this book is for you.
Profile Image for Ted.
4 reviews
April 4, 2008
I read this book with the expectation of gang related stories. I thought it would give me a clear understanding of Frank Lucas' life, but it only gave me the first 35 pages. Some of the stories throughout the book were interesting, including the american gangseter story, but others were humdrum. Although Jacobson gave great facts for the New York stories. Jacobson expresses his journalistic expertise by breaking the book into three parts, which are Uptown, Downtowm, and All Around the Town. the stories were well-written, and had some interesting characters like the sleaze from 14th street, but i believe you have to live and love New York to really appreciate and feel entertained after reading this book.
Profile Image for Jolene.
10 reviews1 follower
April 10, 2008
When all is said and done - I gave this book 3 stars, cause i really did enjoy it. After reading about half the book, I throughly ready the cover - A "Novelization" of the movie and I wanted to HATE it... but couldn't. I enjoy reading books turned into movies for add'l perspective and to get a better understanding of the authors intentions and the term Novelization almost made me put the book down and rent the movie (gasp!)...
I'm glad I read it before seeing the Movie as it did help define the characters and relations to Frank Lucas. If you have seen the Movie... I suggest don't bother reading it - you've seen it all. But if not, the book is an enjoyable and easy read....
Profile Image for Debra Cleaver.
16 reviews2 followers
April 30, 2014
i don't know if it's homesickness, or nostalgia for a new york i never got to experience (fuck you, guiliani, for "cleaning up" my beloved city), but i'm tearing through this book. mark jacobson is a queens native, life-long new-yorker, and an old-school journalist of the jimmy breslin style. most of the articles in this book were written in the 70s, and chronicle the seedier side of new york. can you imagine 14th and 3rd being a seedy corner? jesus, you'd be lucky to rent a studio for 3 grand there now. anyway, you new york types should pick this book up stat.
530 reviews30 followers
October 6, 2013
I think a bunch of the lower scores this book has received is due to disappointment that it's not a complete write-up of the movie. Which is silly, as Jacobson's writing is much better.

Inside you'll find a collection of feature pieces that each convey a true slice of NYC. The tone is one which doesn't seem to surface much any more - a Runyonesque picture of winners and losers with the jaundiced eye of a true New Yorker.

If you bemoan the cleaned-up Times Square and are looking for stiffs that may have walked out of a '70s Tom Waits album, this is your book.
2 reviews5 followers
January 30, 2008
I hate when books are marketed with movies, but loved the NY grittiness throughout this. Shorty after I'd read the 3rd/14th story, I stumbled through some sort of junkie commerce outside of the well known and well reviled neighborhood crackhouse. I couldn't understand any of the conversation and yelling, because I don't speak junkie, but I could appreciate the futility of it. I'd only read a few of Jacobsons articles before, and enjoyed this. Good plane reading.
1,250 reviews15 followers
July 18, 2008
This collection of magazine articles was, not surprisingly, diverse. Only 4 of them held my interest, including the title story, which was used for the basis of the recent movie. The article supporting the theory that Dick Cheney was responsible for the 9/11 attacks was disturbing, insulting, and plain disgusting. I lost momentum after reading that piece. I would not search for any other books by this author.
Profile Image for Sergio GRANDE.
519 reviews9 followers
June 27, 2022
Meh.

From the author of the novel on which the film was based, this is an anthology of articles written by Jacoson and published in The Village Voice and New York Magazine.

The Frank Lucas story, the man who introduced Blue Magic to NYC and was raking in one million a day in the ‘70s is a very good story.

The rest of the tales, making up the bullk of the book, meh.

Final verdict: Meh wins on points.
Profile Image for Lesley.
172 reviews
December 13, 2007
I thought most of the book would be the American Gangster story, but it was only one small part of it. The rest of the book was other short stories about New York that the author had written for the Village Voice, New York Observer, etc. over the years. Some were interesting, some didn't hold my interest at all.
Profile Image for Jamila.
7 reviews3 followers
June 1, 2008
Badass collection of short pieces all about NYC. Reading the book makes you feel open and adventurous. It makes you want to turn to the person next to you on the train and strike up a conversation, cause maybe, just maybe you'll find yourself talking with somebody dark, weird, creepy, or just plain genius like the folks you meet in the collection.
Profile Image for Jenn.
1,647 reviews33 followers
December 13, 2008
These stories (most published in The Voice) were highly entertaining pieces on New York. Of course my favourite was the one about Frank Lucas, having seen American Gangster not so long ago. There was only two pieces I did not read all the way through, mostly because the subject did not interest me at all (politics and sports.)
Profile Image for Dignan107.
216 reviews1 follower
April 20, 2013
Not very enjoyable at all. Another 'film better than book' scenario, (similar to Mothman Prophecies I've recently endured) whereas normally vice-versa is the norm. Just a series of stories of people that live in the same city. These people could be from any western world city. A blatant New York cash-in. Shame
Profile Image for Georgene.
1,291 reviews47 followers
June 6, 2015
The first article in this compilation was used as the basis of "American Gangster", starring Denzel Washington. The rest, while not as famous, are also very good.

Jacobson has been a journalist for years in New York City and apparently worked for the Village Voice for many of those years.

All the stories in this volume are worth reading.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 42 reviews

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