This book covers much of the same territory as Wiseguy by Nicholas Pileggi. This is the true story immortalized in the fiction film Goodfellas. And although it is about the same robbery and criminals as Wiseguy, it comes at it from a slightly different angle. For example, there is more focus on the two Lufthansa executives who conceived the plan. However, all comparisons to Wiseguy end there.
The book is doomed by the author's overly florid and heavy handed style. Every sentence is overwritten in almost poetic terms, and often in words too intellectual for the context or characters. The book was co-written by Henry Hill, though you have to wonder how much he really did. Much of the book was (admittedly) simply made up by the Daniel Simone to fill in gaps where no first person recollections exist.
Bizarrely, Daniel wastes time on a very uncomfortable oral sex scene with Stacks, who was supposed to be bringing the getaway van to be destroyed. His descriptions of the act are not only totally unnecessary but also very awkward and almost creepy. The entire section devoted to Stacks, his "girlfriend," and some other African Americans is borderline racist. (I refuse to quote any of the descriptions of her anatomy.) Simone's attempts to replicate their slang and speech are cringe worthy.
Simone, in fact, does an awful job of replicating everyone's speech patterns. Every gangster character talks with odd phrases like "what'rr going on?" And the characters who don't speak English well are even worse. The "educated" FBI and police agents all talk like Harvard professors.
Confusingly, the book is written from Henry Hill's POV- except when it isn't. It can be jarring when one section narrated by Hill leads into another section that isn't, with no stylistic differences between them.
About the only section I found interesting was the glossary of Italian slang, two pages in the back of the book.
The Lufthansa Heist does a pretty good job of describing the overall life and times surrounding the robbery, and goes into great detail about the robbery itself. And while I can't call this a good read, it does illuminate one of the more sensational events in the history of crime.