Author picture

Ovid Demaris (1919–1998)

Author of The Last Mafioso

49 Works 423 Members 5 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the names: O. Demaris, Ovid Demaris, Demarsis Ovid

Works by Ovid Demaris

The Last Mafioso (1980) 115 copies, 1 review
The Green Felt Jungle (1901) 62 copies, 3 reviews
Captive City (1969) 25 copies
The Boardwalk Jungle (1986) 17 copies
Ricochet (1988) 15 copies
America the Violent (1970) 11 copies
The Lusting Drive (2020) 10 copies
The Vegas Legacy (1983) 9 copies
The Dillinger Story (2012) 8 copies
The Slasher (1959) 7 copies
The Extortioners (2016) 5 copies, 1 review
Ride the Gold Mare (2020) 4 copies
Dillinger (1973) 3 copies
JUDITH EXNER - MY STORY (1978) 3 copies
The Enforcer (1960) 3 copies
The Overlord (1972) 3 copies
La tête enflée (1963) 3 copies
Cador,fais pas de cadeau] (1962) 2 copies
El último Mafioso (1983) 2 copies
Le book émissaire (1964) 2 copies
The Long Night (1959) 2 copies
Tout le monde descend (1993) 2 copies
The Contract (1971) 2 copies
Gold-Plated Sewer, the (2020) 2 copies
DILLINGER 1 copy
The Parasite 1 copy
Fatal Mistake (1966) 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Demaris, Ovid
Legal name
Desmarais, Ovide
Birthdate
1919-09-06
Date of death
1998-03-12
Gender
male
Occupations
journalist
Organizations
United Press
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
Since reading Green Felt Jungle, Demaris's expose on Mafia operations in Las Vegas co-written with Ed Reid, I was intrigued to read is inside look on an acting boss found to be an FBI informant destined for the Witness Protection Program. I applaud Demaris for including the detailed "dramatis personae" to make sense of the myriad character spread over 500 pages. However, the story is not really engrossing until we, literally, "cut to the chase" in the final act as a Mafia contract pushes show more "Jimmy the Weasel" Fratianno out of the Mob, into hiding, and ultimately into the witness stand as a gov't-protected testifier. For some reason, Demaris chooses to fill a lot of the book with lengthy conversations that ring false; supposedly Demaris and his colleagues automatically lapse into narrating their own documentary about Mafia history and hits. I would like to know more about how he came to be an FBI source for so long. This important sub-plot is relegated to a passing reference.

The book is a revealing tale of life in the Mafia with an indepth look at the Los Angeles crime family, The Chicago Outfit, and The Cleveland crime family, and several notable mobsters. There are also notable non-mobsters featured with unsavory connections, including Frank Sinatra (willing to work with made men to make his mom proud to save a son in Knights of Malta), and murky mayor Joseph Alioto.

Johnny Roselli's life is also detailed and the book describes conversations the two had about John Roselli's involvement in the CIA's plot to assassinate Fidel Castro, known as "Family Jewels" when declassified in 2007. The book also mentions Roselli's alleged involvement in the John F. Kennedy assassination, but dismisses the notion that the Mafia had anything to do with the JFK murder while suggesting both Hoffa (for the scrutiny of RFK) and Castro (for uncovering the CIA's plot to assassinate him) had motive and intent to slay JFK.
show less
Effective, entertaining story of a newly rich oil man confronted by a gangster and his assorted minions who are trying to get him to hand over an interest in an oil well. After a while, it isn't the money that is at stake, but the gangster's pride, and the violence escalates. The plot isn't the most believable, but you don't have a lot of time to worry about it. The book is well-written for the most part, particularly the most brutal scenes, which come faster and faster as the 144-page novel show more speeds to a fiery conclusion. While the characters fall into types, they are fairly well-drawn. Demaris's writing only falters when he tries to philosophize or get inside the head of a 17-year old girl. show less
a very interesting and detailed treatise on pre-corporate, mafia Vegas. this opus of investigative journalism discusses the barry Goldwater links to gus greenbaum etc. as well as Sinatra's links to giancana etc. from casino ownership from Siegel to the Syndicate 60s this study reaches out from the hidden interests to discuss the hits and hierarchy in Chicago, Detroit, etc. specific syndicate meetings such as the Apalachin are discussed as well as the historical meet with luciano in Havana. show more this is all augmented with wiretap transcripts, photos and in this edition an addendum from 1963 or so. show less
Solid, informed, straight-ahead narration of how Las Vegas was founded, and how it was controlled for many years by a small group of Mafiosi and politicians. Interesting sidelights about New York and Chicago mob figures, and the Texas feud between Benny "Cowboy" Binion and Herb "The Cat" Noble.
½

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Statistics

Works
49
Members
423
Popularity
#57,687
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
5
ISBNs
56
Languages
4
Favorited
1

Charts & Graphs