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For other authors named Anthony DeStefano, see the disambiguation page.

Anthony DeStefano (2) has been aliased into Anthony M. DeStefano.

5 Works 161 Members 2 Reviews

Works by Anthony DeStefano

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2 reviews
Man, this book suffers from false advertising. MOB KILLER: THE BLOODY RAMPAGE blah blah blah -- you'd think this book was about Kuklinski, or at least his equal. Alas, Charlie Canigs is hardly the larger-than-life character that is The Ice Man. We're pretty sure he killed four people (possibly five, but he wasn't convicted of the fifth), and I know it's a horrible thought, but -- that's it? Really? Four people over 10+ years is a bloody rampage? Of course, body count isn't everything. A show more wiseguy doesn't have to number his victims on two hands to be myth-worthy. For all we know (and we're certainly told it over and over in this book), Charlie Canigs really is a bloodthirsty, sadistic, morbid, sociopathic mobster with few equals in the personality disorders department. The problem is that the book tells us this, but it doesn't show us. And this is largely because Charles Carneglia declined to be interviewed by the author, and the subsequent lack of personality completely cripples the book. MOB KILLER fails to bring Charlie Canigs to life, and I think the author knows it, which is why most of the book isn't even really about Charlie. It's about Gotti, Alite, McMahon, Zuccaro -- all of whom are much more present personalities. We get lots of quotations from these guys -- words straight from the mobsters' mouths -- but I can recall maybe three quotations attributed to Charlie (and even those are hearsay). The guy who supposedly made Gotti dangerous just seems absent from his own book, and that's a real shame. show less
½
I found this hard going to begin with but don't get me wrong I found it interesting as it went on it was just a style of writing I was not used to.

It is written by reporter Anthony M DeStefano who interviewed Massino's family and friends as well as law enforcement officials.

It tells of the history of the Mafia and how Joseph Massino and his other members continued there business and ultimately ratted each other out.

I was interested in this as watching The Wire at the moment about gangsters show more in New York and was interested in the wire taps etc that were talked about in this book. How the police/FBI go after the criminals.

I would recommend reading this but stick with it.
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Works
5
Members
161
Popularity
#131,050
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
2
ISBNs
106
Languages
6

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