The real-life story of the real Bill McCoy. The author is listed as Van De Water, but he was as much a ghostwriter as a writer, and the story is told in the first person with McCoy's voice.
Bill McCoy was the instigator of "Rum Row", which supplied America with alcohol during prohibition for a number of years. Rum Row was a fleet of ships sitting just outside US waters, carrying alcohol. Smaller boats came out at night to buy the alcohol from the ships, and carry into the US. This way the ships avoided breaking any laws since they were in international waters. To quote:
"Schooners and yachts, windjamming square-riggers from Scandanavia, tramps from England and Germany, converted tugs and submarines, chasers, anything with a bottom that would float and a hold that could be filled with booze, they stretched away in a long line, bowing the surges, swinging with the tide and wind, waiting in apathy all day for the strenuous activity that began as soon as night fell. [...] It was a roaring, boisterous, sinful-and-glad-of-it, marine Main Street of shifting membership and continually increasing size, and I was its founder and first citizen."
Bill McCoy a teetotaler, and a honest straightforward person was liked by drug runners and government officials alike. He never sold watered down or adultered booze, his name became a synonym for quality and good dealing, the "real McCoy". It seems that McCoy was motivated as much by the love of boats and the sea, and perhaps by the excitement, as by the lure of profits.
Eventually, the government caught up with him and he served nine months in jail. However, his "jail" sentence involved considerable freedom -- a point the book does not explain very well.
This is an incredible true account. It spends a great deal of time on boating, and ships and how drup smuggling worked. It doesn't shy away from some of the unseemly details of the alcohol running, e.g., murder, fighting, orgies. For all this four stars. However, the book omits a lot of personal details, and we never learn very much about McCoy as a person. For instance, did McCoy have a girlfriend? A wife? Close friends other than his dog? How did he cooperate with the government after he was captured? The afterword says he only cooperated with the government against smuggling of aliens and drugs, never alcohol. McCoy is a bit coy on this account, however.
Postscript: The phrase "The Real McCoy" was already in use in the late 1800's and thus did not originally refer to Bill McCoy.