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Street Soldier: My Life as an Enforcer for Whitey Bulger and the Boston Irish Mob Book
All due respect to the Gambinos and the Genoveses, but the Italian mob families aren't the only gangsters to make for compelling memoirs, as highlighted by Street Soldier. In terms of relentless ruthlessness and its obsession with the almighty dollar, the Irish mob of Boston's James "Whitey" Bulger could match its New York counterparts hit for bloody hit. For decades, Edward J MacKenzie, Jr (aka Eddie Mac) was a drug dealer, enforcer and key associate of Bulger (on the run as this book was published). Mac's first-person account of those years is rife with more gory details per page than the entire last series of The Sopranos. By the brutal code of honor and loyalty in the streets, the candid dishing of such dirt marks MacKenzie as a world-class rat, second only to Salvatore "Sammy the Bull" Gravano, the man who put John Gotti away. But Eddie Mac has some justification in spilling the beans; in exchange for his tips, the Feds turned a blind eye toward his crimes. (It's also worth nothing that Bulger himself was an informant for the FBI.) The author certainly doesn't portray himself as any sort of hero or "gangster with a heart of gold". Witness his charming account of one of many attempts to "enlighten" a wayward associate: Probation notwithstanding, I had to open Steve's eyes a little. I headed over to Dunkin' Donuts and bought a cup of coffee for $1.24. Medium, black, scalding hot... Steve was still in his car, sleeping like a baby. The window was down and he had his head against the door, hands under his cheeks. I poured the hot coffee down the side of his face, making sure to get some on his eyeballs... I swear if I'd had enough money to buy the gasoline that day that's what I would have done... but I'd only had $1.30, so the coffee had to do. Although MacKenzie has two ghost writers (Karas is a contributor to People magazine and the author of The Onassis Women, while Muscato is a self-described "strategic communications consultant"), the prose never rises above the level of the sleaziest pulp fiction. But that of course is exactly its appeal, and fans of the true-crime genre will find Street Soldier a supreme pleasure, guilty or not. --Jim DeRogatis, Amazon.comRead More
from£17.53 | RRP: * Excludes Voucher Code Discount Also available Used from £11.62
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Pickabook
Edward J. MacKenzie, Phyllis Karas
- 1586420763
- 9781586420765
- Edward J. MacKenzie, Phyllis Karas
- 1 April 2005
- Steerforth Press
- Paperback (Book)
- 256
- Reprint
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