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Hit 29: Based on the Killer's Own Account

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After the crime-primer success of Joey the Hitman, Hit 29 takes readers on a stranger-than-fiction journey of one actual hit taken on by Jewish hitman, numbers king, and loan shark “Joey.” But the twenty-ninth contract hit Joey has taken on (without a conviction) turns out to be a lot more complicated than it first appears. As recounted in Joey’s patented matter-of-fact, regular-guy tone, the target, a low-level numbers “controller,” turns out to be an old acquaintance from the neighborhood, the client is a man who once tried to have Joey hit, and there are enough twists and double-backs—not to mention fascinatingly credible mob details and color—to keep Soprano fans up all night. This New York Times best-seller, soon to be a major motion picture from Paramount, is a true-crime classic.

364 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1974

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Joey the Hit Man

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Jessica White.
498 reviews40 followers
July 4, 2017
NetGalley approved me for a copy of Hit #29 written by a supposed hit man.
Joey the Hit Man has killed 28 people, soon to be 29.
He liked doing the "heavyweight" work, just not too often. He was a numbers man, a controller. More or less, he was a bookie that took bets and was responsible for collecting losses and paying winners. He was guaranteed an upwards of $10,000 a week in bets and cigarettes. So why was he taking heavyweight work to kill people when he was earning the same amount from one hit?
I think it was the adrenaline for him. He enjoyed taking the lives of other people because it put him in control. He was calling the shots. He was playing God. The rush he felt from the killing was far more ecstatic for him than just running numbers.
Now I had several problems with this book.
1) Since it is based on the killer's own account, I found some of it to be a tad far fetched.
2) He speaks of the Bronx as his home, never leaving, always there.
3) In regards to the statement above, over halfway through the book he throws out that he was in the Army and served in the Korean War. But previously mentioned never leaving the Bronx?
4) He knew how to run numbers, bets were his specialty. Cigarettes were an added income. So why become a hitman?
5) He was so cautious but often let his ego shine through his words.

I do want to thank NetGalley for approving me for this book, but I would not recommend this to anyone that enjoys true crime books like me.

This review and more can be found at A Reader's Diary!
Profile Image for Tikhon Jelvis.
125 reviews29 followers
February 28, 2024
Seems like this book was a heavy inspiration for Jhereg, the first novel in what has been my favorite fantasy series since high school. I don't read many crime novels and at first I figured there were just some common tropes that overlapped but, ultimately, there were just too many details about "Joey"—how he thinks about hits, some of his experiences earlier in his career, how the "organization" works—that had parallels in Jhereg. One of the episodes near the beginning of Jhereg was reminiscent of the hit 28 which had happened right before the eponymous hit 29 that this book focuses on. (Appropriately translated into a sword-and-sorcery world, of course!)

I was surprised by the connection—I picked this book up from a little free library on a whim just based on the title—but, ultimately, it was pretty cool to see where a lot of the details and ideas of a book I enjoyed came from.

The connection to Jhereg aside, Hit 29 was a solid read. The story itself and especially the dialog was tightly written, more like a movie script than anything realistic. I'm sure it's based in reality but in a Hollywood "based on a true story" sort of way. The real standout was the little details that added verisimilitude to the story, like how Joey explains that he needed to vet possible locations for a hit at night because the nature of an area can totally change in the dark. Apart from that, it read more like a noir story than a documentary and was, in that respect, perfectly serviceable but nothing special.
100 reviews1 follower
April 26, 2022
INTERESTING !!!

A interesting read..... Its the kind of book that you don't want put down until you've finished the last page. If you want to be a hit man, lots of help her
55 reviews4 followers
June 29, 2017
In high school for some reason I took an interest in reading books about organized crime. If memory serves me well I began with THE VALACHI PAPERS and move on from there. One book I picked up in paperback was KILLER: THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A MAFIA HIT MAN. It took me a while to get around to reading it, actually when I was in college. It was a fascinating read filled with stories by a man who claimed to have killed a fairly large number of people while never being prosecuted for it.

That read came in handy when as a member of the programming board at Ball State we brought “Joey”, the author and subject of that book, to campus to speak. He was on tour promoting the book having left that life behind. As a member of the board we all went out to dinner with him that night. He told us stories of his life and later that night spoke before a large crowd with even more tales. Apparently he never left that life behind far enough as I have learned from the publisher that he succumbed a bout of lead poisoning in the form of being shot while at the race track, a favorite locale of his.

Which brings us to this book, HIT #29. In the book we’re given a few details of the not so friendly attitude Joey shared with another made man who calls him for a meet at a restaurant. The meet was set up by the man’s boss, a hit of someone they’ve discovered is stealing from the mob. The target is a head numbers runner who has systematically been hitting others with his inside knowledge and the help of two low level thugs. Caught and giving him up in the hopes of staying alive, they now know it was this man who set it all in motion. He was someone Joey knew from the neighborhood growing up. Now he’s being offered $20,000 to take him out.

Joey accepts the job reluctantly having just completed hit #28 not long prior. His rule of thumb is to law low for a while to make sure he’s clear of the first hit before taking on the next. But a bad day at the track and a few other items help him decided to take on this hit. What follows is his step by step routine of how he sets up the hit, how he prepares, the follow through and more. Along the way his suspicions of the man who presented him the job grow as well to the point he begins to wonder if his intended target is that or if he’s being set up to be the target himself.

The book is written in easy fashion, as if Joey were sitting there talking to you like a friend, recounting the story to your instead of writing it. For me, having met him (or at least the person who said he was Joey) I can see him now. A stout, solidly built man, not too tall with a moustache and slicked down hair, the ring on his hand with a coin surrounded in jewels (he told an interesting story about that to us that night) and a smile and pleasant attitude. And yet he’s a killer.

At the heart of it all that’s what this book is about, the killing of one human being by another. There is no hero to root for. Perhaps an anti-hero in the form of Joey, a man who may be actually fighting for his own life rather than taking one of someone else. While reading the book he does things and recounts past experiences that make you realize he is a criminal. And yet you find yourself hoping he comes out all right in the end.

If you enjoy crime non-fiction books then you’ll enjoy this one. It’s a glimpse of the life led by one of the members of organized crime. It tells you how things work, how he worked when performing a hit and provides you with a look most aren’t privy too. With any luck none of us ever will be. But at least we can read about it and be fascinated by the tale.
Profile Image for BookLover.
139 reviews
August 30, 2020
Really enjoyed learning about the recon process. Would be interesting to learn how he’d handle it today, given all the tech that would help or severely hinder his work.
19 reviews5 followers
July 12, 2021
The story of a hit man of the early 70s, the world of Crazy Joey Gallo, John Gotti, and the classic post-Capone mob. Emphasis on Joey's most memorable paid hit. How he set it up, his murder-for-hire history, the complications, the background, the actual hit. Great insight.
Profile Image for Alex.
8 reviews1 follower
January 22, 2009
true story about some smart jerk killing some stupid pricks... what's not to like?
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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