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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A Fun, Informative Grammatical Abortion,
This review is from: The Way of the Wiseguy: True Stories from the FBI's Most Famous Undercover Agent (Hardcover)
There's really nothing to the book at all (I read it in two hours). Poor english, repetition of the same story multiple times, and no real flow to it at all.
However, if you're curious about mafia life, this is the book to let you know what is, and what isn't real. Pistone dispels several myths and ads a reasonable amount of relatively unknown info as well. Subject matter is fascinating, but he could have used a co author.
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Another side of shameless,
By
This review is from: The Way of the Wiseguy: True Stories from the FBI's Most Famous Undercover Agent (Hardcover)
A quick look at this book and you can already tell what it is: another cash-in. This is a slim 224 pages, with a lot of 'chapters' that consist of a single page, for instance. The book is a quick overview on, yes, the 'way of the wiseguy', a kind of 'guide' to wiseguys from the guy who was 'Donnie Brasco' to the mob. So we get bits about how wiseguys dress, what they do on an average day, whacking people out, eating out, scamming, scheming, etc, etc. The problem is that much of it is familiar. Matter of fact, anyone who's read a few books about the mob, watched your Godfathers and Goodfellas and Casinos and Sopranos, or grew up in New York, will already know most of the material in this book. It's shameless, really. Okay, we had the book and film Donnie Brasco, both of which were fascinating. Next, the Brasco name was used to sell fictional mob stories. And now this. It's a funny thing, but while some mobsters become turncoats and sing songs for book deals, law enforcement officials are often more shameless as they roll out yet another Mafia book to a Sopranos-indoctrinated public. I'm reminded of another Mob figure named Henry Hill, who is now a regular feature at your local bookstore as well. Aside from Wiseguy (and the excellent film Goodfellas) we have the Henry Hill cookbook, and Henry's own guide to 'the Mob's New York'. And, of course, in June 2004 Mr. Hill is coming out with another book, this one detailing his years on the run, in and out of Witness Protection. Yes, the Mafia has provided us with yet another cottage publishing industry, and yes, there is an appetite out there for true crime. But this is definitely not one of the better offerings on the subject. And ask yourself why it's appearing now, almost 25 years after Mr. Pistone's assignment with LCN ended. Yeah, I smell a dollar, too.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
a fun read for the mob fascinated,
This review is from: The Way of the Wiseguy: True Stories from the FBI's Most Famous Undercover Agent (Hardcover)
I am quite interested in the world of organized crime (we must all have a bizare interest...) and found this book both informative and fun. I am not sure how up-to-date this information may be, so I wouldn't recommend taking it as a bible if you mean to join the Mafia, but it is fun as a reference book. Since the work is broken up into short, nonconsecutive chapters, it is little like Pistone's first novel, "Donnie Brasco" of which I am a fan. For a worth while and blunt- and I mean BLUNT (there is a great deal of swearing and coarse language)- account of wiseguy life, this is the best book I have found.
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