Underboss: Sammy the Bull Grayano's Story of Life in the Mafia

Underboss: Sammy the Bull Grayano's Story of Life in the Mafia image
ISBN-10:

0002558904

ISBN-13:

9780002558907

Author(s): Peter Maas
Edition: 1st
Released: Jan 01, 1997
Format: Hardcover, 308 pages
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Description:

From Booklist\nGravano--Sammy the Bull to his Cosa Nostra cohorts--is the highest ranking member of the Mob ever to defect. By turning state's witness against his friend and head of the Gambino family, John Gotti, Gravano was allowed to serve only five years in prison for 19 murders and won the dubious distinction of having to watch his back for the rest of his life. He also hooked up with Maas, author of The Valachi Papers, spent hours talking to him, and revealed a world that readers will be both fascinated and repelled by. As a child, Gravano lived across the street from a saloon, a Mafia hangout in Bensonhurst. Labeled a "slow learner," he found the mobsters to be the one group that didn't put him down, and before long, he was in the gangster life. Gravano speaks matter-of-factly of his escalating Mafia career, which eventually involved becoming a hit man, but oddly, what emotion does come across is that of love, love for the Cosa Nostra and its traditions. Coming after all the murders and mayhem, Gravano's decision to rat on Gotti, mostly for his flamboyance of all things, is almost anticlimactic. Maas writes this page-turner in Gravano's voice, and it's a voice that readers will hear in their heads for a long while. Ilene Cooper\nIn March of 1992, the highest–ranking member of the Mafia in America ever to break his oath of silence testified against his boss, John Gotti. He is Salvatore ("Sammy the Bull") Gravano, second–in–command of the Gambino crime family, the most powerful in the nation. Because of Gotti‘s uncanny ability to escape conviction in state and federal trials despite charges that he was the Mafia‘s top chieftain, the media had dubbed him the "Teflon Don." With Sammy the Bull, this would all change.
Today Gotti is serving life in prison without parole. And as a direct consequence of Gravano‘s testimony, the Cosa Nostra – the Mafia‘s true name – is in shambles.
Peter Maas is the author of the international bestseller The Valachi Papers , which Rudolph Giuliani, then a federal prosecutor and now the mayor of New York City, hailed as "the most important book ever written about the Mafia in America."
In Underboss, based on dozens of hours of interviews with Gravano, we are ushered as never before into the most secret inner sanctums of Cosa Nostra – and an underworld of power, lust, greed, betrayal, deception and sometimes even honour, with the spectre of violent death always poised in the wings. It is a real world we have often read and heard about from the outside; now we are able to experience it in rich, no–holds–barred detail as if we were there ourselves.
Unlike his glamorous boss John Gotti, Sammy the Bull honoured Costra Nostra‘s ancient traditions, hugging the shadows, avoiding the limelight and staying far from the flashbulbs and reporters. But he was present at such key events of the modern Costra Nostra as the sensational slaying of mob boss Paul Castellano, Gotti‘s predecessor, outside a Manhattan steakhouse.
Compulsively readable, Gravano‘s revelations are of enormous historical significance. "There has never been a defendant of his stature in organised crime," the federal judge in the Gotti trial declared, "who has made the leap he has made from one social planet to another."
Gravano‘s is a story about starting out on the street, about killing and being killed, revealing the truth behind a quarter century of shocking headlines. It is also a tragic story of a wasted life, unalterable choices and the web of lies, weakness and treachery that underlies the so–called "Honoured Society."\nAmazon.com Review\nWhat makes this account of the Mafia life and times of Sammy Gravano so seductive is Peter Maas's skillful editing of interview material. From his opening line--"Yeah, you could say I came from a pretty tough neighborhood"--to his final poignant comment on having gotten all his tattoos removed except a head of Christ that resists being eliminated--"I guess God still wants me"--Gr

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