Interference: How Organized Crime Influences Professional Football by Dan Moldea from the Forbidden Bookshelf was an interesting read. It covers the criminal underworld that is just out of public sight that surrounds the National Football League (NFL) from it's early days through about 1986...Even though the book is 512 pages long it reads very fast..it's well written and flows right along. The book can be looked at in two different ways....the NFL (players, coaches, owners and league management) being quietly infiltrated by organized crime, and, the criminal-underworld (bookies, gangsters, Jewish & Italian crime syndicates) and how they run their operations, mostly betting, to make money off the NFL. On the football side there's many interesting tales about the players who were either approached by the syndicates or those were caught betting (Paul Hornung, Alex Karras, Al Schlichter) ....But the most interesting story belongs to Carroll Rosenbloom, owner of first the Baltimore Colts then the L.A. Rams. On the criminal side it goes very deep following on the Jewish side Meyer Lansky & on down, and on the Italian side Carlos Marcello and his gang. The most interesting story here was the murder of Tamara Rand in San Diego, leading to Las Vegas and the beef between betting king-pin Frank "Lefty" Rosenthal and "Tony the Ant" Spilotro which in-turn led to many murders and to the NFL. This is documented in the Martin Scorsese film "Casino"...Also, there's A LOT on how the world of betting works...I speed read through much of this...-There's a ton of info in this book and as I wrote above many side stories & tales, and it's long...But...due to being well written it it was a fairly fast read...a great book if you're interested in organized crime and/or the NFL...4 outta 5 Stars!