While John Dillinger is the main thrust of the book, this is also about the times in which he grew up and then became legendary until his name was known worldwide. We also hear the stories of the other gangsters and gangs who were also part of the post-Prohibition/Depression era: Pretty Boy Floyd, Baby Face Nelson, Machine Gun Kelly, Ma Barker, and of course, Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow. It seems fitting that Toland - in great detail - discusses all of them as they rob, murder, and kidnap their way across the American landscape. Dillinger, especially, captured the imagination of regular people, law enforcement, the media, and government officials from DC to London to yes, even Nazi Germany. He was a scourge, but also a celebrity, both alive and dead.
While I was surprised at first to see that the book would get me so involved in that period, I’m glad it did. You know only hear about the gangsters, their families, the wives and girlfriends. We get glimpses of regular people, who, by being in the cliched wrong place at the wrong time, found themselves held hostage, injured, kidnapped, or dead. Just being in a cafeteria to have a meal, running a hotel or motel, leaving a movie theater, or driving down Main Street as a bank robbery happened could possibly wrap you up in something you never dreamed could occur. And yet, it’s all true.
If you’re seeking a basic biography that will give you a few highlights of Dillinger’s life, this might not be for you. If you want more details about the world during this time frame where you feel like an eerie part of it, I recommend this. The narrator has a nice, soothing, well-modulated voice, that doesn’t get hysterical during key episodes. He also doesn’t try to imitate both male and female voices since he’s reading a history, not something fictional. I’m grateful for that.