Thank you to NetGalley for providing me with an advanced digital copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.
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Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist and author Anthony M. DeStefano presents the definitive book on Vito Genovese, the namesake of a crime family which still considered one of the most viable and dangerous in the U.S. today. From enforcer to Godfather, Vito Genovese rose through the ranks of La Cosa Nostra to head of one of the wealthiest and most dangerous crime families in American history.
Vito Genovese ran rackets as a member of Giuseppe "Joe the Boss" Masseria's gang in New York City before joining forces with Lucky Luciano, Frank Costello, Meyer Lansky, and Bugsy Siegel as bootleggers during Prohibition. As a soldier in the Castellammarese War, he helped orchestrate Masseria's death on behalf of Brooklyn crime lord Salvatore Maranzano, consolidating his position and power before ensuring Maranzano, too, was knocked off. For the next three decades, Vito Genovese--shrewd, merciless, and utterly savage--killed countless gangsters in his bid to become the capo di tutti di capi--boss of bosses--in the American Mafia. Genovese would betray some of the mafia's most notorious bosses, including Albert Anastasia and Frank Costello, to eventually seize control of the Luciano crime family, one that still bears the Genovese name today.
In The Deadly Don, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Anthony M. DeStefano presents the rise and fall of Vito Genovese in this first comprehensive biography of the legendary mafioso--from his childhood in Naples, Italy, and the beginnings of his bullet-ridden criminal career on lower Manhattan's mean streets, through his self-exile in the mid-1930s back to his homeland where he ran a black market operation under the fascist regime of Benito Mussolini, and his return to New York where Genovese
made a fortune as the head of an illegal narcotics empire. DeStefano reveals the important and terrifying role Genovese played in the creation of the Mafia, detailing his bloody and ruthless lifetime of crime that would put him behind bars for his last fifteen years--and securing his infamous place in the history of organized crime.
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For some reason, I (like many other people) have long had a fascination with the Mafia, and especially with the New York families. I also have an interest in the history of New York City, so when this book came up for review, I knew it was perfect for me. Vito Genovese is certainly a well-known figure in the history of the New York Mafia, and I looked forward to learning more about him.
I found this to be a thorough, well-researched story of Genovese, from his life's advent in Naples, Italy, throughout his years in the highest ranks of organized crime, to the last days of his life in a federal detention center. Although only a little over 350 pages, this book did take me a long time to read because it was so heavy in detail, so it was not one I could really escape into for hours at a time. However, if you have any interest in how Genovese completed his rise to the top, set against a backdrop of a detailed history of the New York Mafia of the 1930s through the 1950s and 1960s, this book is certainly worth a spot on your bookshelf, Kindle or otherwise.