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Mr. Capone  Cover Image Book Book

Mr. Capone / Robert J. Schoenberg.

Summary:

Biography of gangster Al Capone chroncling where he came from, how he moved to the top rank of organized crime, and how he ran "the outfit."

Record details

  • ISBN: 0688089410 (acidfree paper)
  • Physical Description: 480 pages, 24 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, portraits, map ; 25 cm
  • Edition: 1st ed.
  • Publisher: New York : William Morrow & Co.,, [1992]

Content descriptions

General Note:
Map on lining papers.
Cover subtitle: The real--and complete--story of Al Capone.
Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 370-463) and index.
Target Audience Note:
Young Adult
Subject: Capone, Al, 1899-1947.
Capone, Al, 1899-1947.
Criminals > United States > Biography.
Criminals > Biography.

Available copies

  • 7 of 7 copies available at Evergreen Indiana.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 7 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Akron Carnegie PL - Akron B CAP (Text) 75253000002116 Adult Biography Available -
Clayton-Liberty Township Public Library - Main 364.1 SCH (Text) 38324000008524 Adult Non-Fiction Available -
Noble Co PL - Central (Albion) 364.1 SCH (Text) 38131000192962 NCPLC-Non-fiction Available -
North Madison Co PL - Elwood PL B CAPONE SCH (Text) 30419100129952 Adult Non-Fiction Available -
Porter County PL - Valparaiso Public Library 921 CAPONE (Text) 33410000038085 Adult Nonfiction Available -
Spencer Co PL - Rockport Main Library 364.109 Sch B (Text) 70741000041935 Adult Non Fiction Available -
Winchester Comm. PL - Winchester 921 CAP (Text) 76682000063155 Adult Nonfiction Available -

Loading Recommendations...

  • Baker & Taylor
    A portrait of Al Capone tells of his childhood delinquency, his Brooklyn mob apprenticeship, and his move to Chicago and traces his development into a man who was at times surprisingly rational despite his tendency toward manipulation and brutality
  • Baker & Taylor
    A portrait of Al Capone tells of his childhood delinquency, his Brooklyn mob apprenticeship, and his move to Chicago and traces his development into a man who was at times surprisingly rational despite his tendency toward manipulation and brutality. 50,000 first printing.
  • Blackwell North Amer
    In 1930 Al Capone was arguably the most famous American alive--both here and abroad. Today, forty-five years after his death, his name recognition is still the envy of any celebrity or presidential candidate. Few men have achieved such notoriety, but who was the man behind the legends? Now, in Mr. Capone, Robert J. Schoenberg shows us, for the first time, the real Al Capone--where he came from, how he moved to the top rank of organized crime, and how he ran "the outfit." The portrait that emerges is certainly of a calculating and at times brutal man, but also one of surprising wit and charm. Capone was a rational man who built his bootlegging empire with guns but who managed it with a "genius for organization," a businessman of crime.
    Schoenberg reveals new information about Capone's adolescent delinquency and gang membership in pre-World War I Brooklyn. Capone then served his apprenticeship in organized crime to Brooklyn bar owner and racketeer Frankie Yale, while getting into scrapes on the Brooklyn waterfront and acquiring his famous scars.
    When Capone left Brooklyn for Chicago, he thought it was only a temporary move arranged by his boss to avoid the wrath of one Bill Lovett. But the Chicago of 1920 proved very congenial to Capone--it was a thirsty city with a thirsty mayor. Schoenberg lays out, again for the first time, the dynamics of power and corruption among Capone's allies and enemies throughout Chicago's "beer wars" and shows the meaning, strategy, and reason behind each killing. We see events from the participants' points of view. From an unpublished police report, we get new insight into the St. Valentine's Day Massacre with a theory to explain a mass killing that one expert says "never made sense." Capone was in Miami at the time, where the local oligarchy--itself fond of his wares and hardly above corruption, but preferring to keep it local--carried on a comic opera struggle with him. Mr. Capone also details for the first time all the issues and maneuverings on both sides in the tax situation Capone faced, including modern commentary by three principals in the American Bar Association's August 1990 mock retrial of Capone (in which he was acquitted).
    Mr. Capone also explodes numerous myths that have surrounded the Capone legend, the most important being that Capone was an irrational man who was unable to control his temper. Al Capone was not an obscure drone for his first years in Chicago; gangster Dion O'Banion was not an altar boy and was not murdered for his alleged aspersions against Sicilians (Capone's own parents hailed from a village outside Naples); there was not a party at Capone's Palm Island mansion on the night of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre; and the killing of Assistant State's Attorney William McSwiggin had absolutely nothing to do with Klondike O'Donnell's alleged bad-mouthing of Capone's beer.
    Scrupulously researched, Mr. Capone includes much never-before-published material and is the most penetrating and complete account ever written of Al Capone's colorful and extraordinary life. It is both a biography of a famous--and infamous--American legend and a brilliant portrayal of an earlier but hardly more innocent America. Schoenberg places Capone in his cultural and historical context, shows us how the world looked through Capone's eyes, tells us what made him tick, and reminds us how America lived under Prohibition.

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