Lucky Luciano: The Man Who Organized Crime in America
|
| Price: |
7 new or used available from $7.50
Average customer review:Product Description
Written by a top investigative reporter who coverd Luciano's trail from begining to end. This book is a detailed account of Luciano's intriguing life.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #647059 in Books
- Published on: 2000-08-01
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 368 pages
Customer Reviews
LET DOWN
Initially, I thought this book would be interesting regarding a biographical over-view of the old Mafioso. The book might have been rated as a "5-star" when it was originally published,but not now! The entire format and story line dates to the same time of the original prostitution indictment. I thought from the narrative that I was reading some "Boston Blackie" novel.
The front cover leads one to believe that the biography was written rather recently, but ... thats not true .
The book was a literary "cement shoe" that dragged the reader down into the depths of boredom. I would recommend that the reader search for something else, "anything else!"
A Wonderful Piece of History
OK, some of you may be misled by the title, expecting an in-depth "biog" as one self-styled "Prince" put it, but what we have here is a wonderful contemporary view of Luciano's trial and his history and the 20s and 30s racket scene as it was viewed by his contemporary New Yorkers. Of course there's nothing on Lansky and Siegel--they were unknowns at the time, just as Luciano was until the time of his trial. Of course there's nothing on Luciano's wartime collaboration with the military, or his subsequent deportation--because these things hadn't happened yet! Of course Dewey used Luciano to further his own political ambitions--so what? As for his children, which one reviewer inquires about, Lucky never married and is never known to have produced any. If you're interested in Thirties crime though, here is a Thirties view of it that is about as fresh as you're likely to find anywhere. At least it'll do until Ellen's book comes out and it still beats the fiction of Gosch's "Last Testament".
A Noted Secondary Source
Powell's documentation is basically correct based on the bare facts of the story found in New York City tabloid newspapers and in archived files. As such, it is a rare secondary source into the lives and legends of the prostitutes, bookers and madams who formed the web of prostitution used at Prosecutor Thomas Dewey's behest to convict the elusive Charlie Lucky. Originally written in the 1930s, Powell's prose reveals the language of old-style morality which was required in the days of censorship. As such, it is a time-capsule of the social mores governing prostitution. While crime historians focus on Lucky's later years, this jewel preserves the trial data that forced Luciano from the shadows.




