A great book about a great man. Or a bad book about a bad man?
I really do not know. I think this is the first True Crime I have ever read, so I do not have much to compare to. Schoenberg might be one of those people a bit too sympathetic with gangsters, businessmen by other means, but I will accept he offers a compelling portrait: Not too lurid, not to grandiose. Perhaps its biggest drawback, and I am glad a number of reviewers agreed on this, is that at times it is almost a list of names. Too many crooks, cops, and politicians show up for the uninitiated to keep them straight. Certainly people already familiar with Chicago in the 1920’s will get more out of it, and I hope to do the same during a second read.
Because of the recent movie with Tom Hardy, I was hoping to read a bit more on his final years, on which Schoenberg does not spend much time. However, an equally hard period for Capone had to be his time in prison, and here we do get plenty of information. The expected topics and characters are covered in enough detail: Torrio, bootlegging, O’Bannon, the Gennas, St. Valentin’s Masacre, taxes… The exception being the Untouchables. Certainly after Brian De Palma’s film—a childhood favorite of mine, sorry—Schoenberg should have a bit more to say, even if he knows just as well as we do that Ness did not bring Capone down.