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Questo incredibile, sconvolgente viaggio nel mondo affaristico e criminale della camorra si apre e si chiude nel segno delle merci, del loro ciclo di vita. Le merci "fresche", appena nate, che sotto le forme più svariate - pezzi di plastica, abiti griffati, videogiochi, orologi - arrivano al porto di Napoli e, per essere stoccate e occultate, si riversano fuori dai giganteschi container per invadere palazzi appositamente svuotati di tutto, come creature sventrate, private delle viscere. E le merci ormai morte che, da tutta Italia e da mezza Europa, sotto forma di scorie chimiche, morchie tossiche, fanghi, addirittura scheletri umani, vengono abusivamente "sversate" nelle campagne campane, dove avvelenano, tra gli altri, gli stessi boss che su quei terreni edificano le loro dimore fastose e assurde - dacie russe, ville hollywoodiane, cattedrali di cemento e marmi preziosi - che non servono soltanto a certificare un raggiunto potere ma testimoniano utopie farneticanti, pulsioni messianiche, millenarismi oscuri.
Questa è oggi la camorra, anzi, il "Sistema", visto che la parola "camorra" nessuno la usa più: da un lato un'organizzazione affaristica con ramificazioni impressionanti su tutto il pianeta e una zona grigia sempre più estesa in cui diventa arduo distinguere quanta ricchezza è prodotta direttamente dal sangue e quanta da semplici operazioni finanziarie. Dall'altro lato un fenomeno criminale profondamente influenzato dalla spettacolarizzazione mediatica, per cui i boss si ispirano negli abiti e nelle movenze a divi del cinema e a creature dell'immaginario, dai gangster di Tarantino alle sinistre apparizioni de "Il corvo" con Brandon Lee. Figure come Gennarino McKay, Sandokan Schiavone, Cicciotto di Mezzanotte, Ciruzzo 'o Milionario, se non avessero provocato decine di morti ammazzati potrebbero sembrare in tutto e per tutto personaggi inventati da uno sceneggiatore con troppa fantasia.
In questo libro avvincente e scrupolosamente documentato Roberto Saviano ha ricostruito sia le spericolate logiche economico-finanziarie ed espansionistiche dei clan del napoletano e del casertano, da Secondigliano a Casal di Principe, sia le fantasie infiammate che alle logiche imprenditoriali coniugano il fatalismo mortuario dei samurai del medioevo giapponese.
Ne viene fuori un libro anomalo e potente, appassionato e brutale, al tempo stesso oggettivo e visionario, di indagine e di letteratura, pieno di orrori come di fascino inquietante, un libro il cui giovanissimo autore, nato e cresciuto nelle terre della più efferata camorra, è sempre coinvolto in prima persona. Sono pagine che afferrano il lettore alla gola e lo trascinano in un abisso dove davvero nessuna immaginazione è in grado di arrivare.
331 pages, Paperback
First published April 1, 2006

A kilo of cocaine costs the producer 1,000 euros, but by the time it reaches the wholesaler, it’s already worth 30,000. After the first cut 30 kilos becomes 150: a market value of approximately 15 million euros. With a larger cut, 30 kilos can be stretched to 200.
They took him to the beach, tied him to a chair facing the sea, and began to stuff his mouth and nose with sand. Magliulo tried to breathe, swallowing and spitting sand, blowing it out his nose, vomiting, chewing, and twisting his neck. His saliva, mixing with the sand, formed a kind of primitive cement, a gluey substance that slowly suffocated him.





Saviano is no refined thinker. He is simply saving the world the only way he knows how. To hate with real quality, in a way that actually inflicts pain, you have to understand things. Saviano understands them.
Cement in quantities enough to pave the entire Mediterranean and every single grove and dune in the vicinity (sans sewage systems and with soot thrown into the mix to cut material costs). Dead construction workers left to die while everyone lays low to avoid being questioned by the authorities about the site. Sweatshops running on illegal, virtually free labor to churn out designer clothes bearing the "Made in Italy" tag (yes, Versace and Gucci are in on the game too, auctioning contracts with the shop owners). 15-year-old kids wielding Kalashnikovs, convinced they’ve caught God by the beard and that their wretched little lives finally mean something.
Entrepreneurs with massive, multi-profile businesses (spanning from narcotics to mozzarella) who are forced to manage their empires from underground safehouses, unable to move a muscle without an entire platoon of bodyguards. They cross themselves and devoutly kiss icons of the Virgin Mary to protect their business ventures, bless chapels with tears in their eyes, and proudly baptize their babies. Neighborhood labs handing out free doses for market research to see if the new drug blend hits the spot and becomes a bestseller – and takers are never in short supply. Grumbling, anxious wives of imprisoned clan members patiently waiting for their monthly family stipend, delivered by an elderly courier pocketing a little extra cash on top of his meager pension. Toxic agricultural lands. And above all – wide-shut eyes, selective amnesia, selective hearing and vision for everyone gravitating around this universe. Silence, resignation, even approval in the style of: "Hey, our mafiosi are the absolute best, the others can't even touch them!" How can one not feel proud!
Welcome to 2006, the year the book was published, in gorgeous Campania and venerable Naples. Where, by the way, about 60% of the incoming shipping container traffic vanishes along the way, dissolving like smoke. In the land of law and order, where no state, no bleeding-heart liberals, and no over-wound moralists can throw a wrench in the gears. In the land of the purest, no-frills entrepreneurial capitalism, right under the sub-chapter of "Darwinism" – that of the Camorra. Cosa Nostra and ’Ndrangheta can sit back and turn pale with envy.
No Anti-Mafia unit, no dissolution of 70 municipal councils can stop the Camorra. (Back home in Bulgaria, they haven't even heard the word "dissolution"). Money is where the power is, and where the money is, lies the truth; and the truth is never contested, proven only with a Kalashnikov or by being burned alive in your own car. Even the traditionally beloved Catholic priests like Don Peppino Diana are not untouchable – if they start taking their roles too seriously and muddling the minds of their flock, five point-blank shots before Mass settle the matter. And then the headlines paint him as a libertine of sorts, while passionately listing the latest romantic conquests of two notorious bosses – after all, people want to read about celebrities, don't they?
Roberto Saviano presents the inside view, the view of a boy from the neighborhood. Before they put him under 24/7 police protection and he stopped leaving the house. (Has there ever been a single native journalist put under state protection back home? Best to keep quiet, that's how you live a long life; why would the prosecution and the Ministry of Interior waste time on such nonsense?)
Does it sound familiar? No, not for Roberto, but for his “heroes”? The ones who are our national heroes today, quietly sailing yachts and driving luxury cars, fondly reminiscing about their first million with SIC, VIS (1 and 2), TIM (which to this day none of our security services will ever acknowledge, because they consider the battle long lost), or that whole "mass privatization" saga. They drop a tear for some cool guy killed back in the glorious manly days, while now they have to doze off over boring holdings with long names and struggle to keep track of their millions, don't they? What boring times we live in...
We need more people like Roberto, and fewer like "his" bosses. But the latter always manage to secure their spot at the trough. Some of them even read Sun Tzu and Jung. And then they teach us business tactics and business ethics. In fact, they’ve already imposed them on us. Along with politics. And morality. Delivered in flawless, refined Bulgarian. And they’ll even bless a chapel or two, won't they? And Inspector Cattani gets killed in the end anyway...