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Top Hoodlum

Frank Costello, Prime Minister of the Mafia

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0 of 1 copy available

BOTH FRANK COSTELLO AND VITO GENOVESE FEATURE AS MAIN CHARACTERS PLAYED BY ROBERT DE NIRO IN THE 2025 FILM THE ALTO KNIGHTS, WRITTEN BY NICHOLAS PILEGGI AND DIRECTED BY BARRY LEVINSON
From Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Anthony DeStefano, Top Hoodlum is the definitive book on the man who defined the Mafia as we know it: Frank "The Prime Minister" Costello. From a dirt poor childhood in southern Italy, Costello rose through the ranks of New York's Mafia and became its most public face, even becoming the inspiration for The Godfather's Don Corleone. Now with new FBI revelations, eyewitness accounts, family mementos, and never-before-published material, Top Hoodlum takes readers inside the life of the preeminent mob boss of the 20th Century.

The press nicknamed him "The Prime Minister of the Underworld." The U.S. Treasury's Bureau of Narcotics described him as "one of the most powerful and influential Mafia leaders in the U.S." But to friends and associates, he was simply "Uncle Frank." Who was Frank Costello really? That's the question Pulitzer Prizewinning reporter Anthony M. DeStefano sets out to answer—in his definitive portrait of one of the most fascinating figures in the annals of American crime . . .
Using newly released FBI files, eyewitness accounts, and family mementos, Top Hoodlum takes you inside the Mafia that
Frank Costello helped build from the ground up, from small time bootlegging and gambling to a nationwide racketeering empire.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 30, 2018
      Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist DeStefano (The Big Heist) draws from recently released FBI documents, family testimony, and court records to construct an engrossing chronicle of the life of notorious Mafia boss Frank Costello (1891–1973), a “reluctant prince of the Mafia” who, despite his criminal undertakings, was “on a quest to be seen as legitimate.” Costello began building his empire as a bootlegger during Prohibition, importing booze from Canada, before expanding his operation to include gambling, and later building a web of political influence within New York City’s famously corrupt Tammany Hall. Although he frequently butted heads with then mayor Fiorello La Guardia, who was on a mission to rid the city of organized crime, Costello managed to avoid serving major jail time. The book provides ample historical background, including a fascinating historical twist in which Costello’s quest for legitimacy plays out during WWII when Costello and cohort Charles “Lucky” Luciano supplied the military with vital information on Sicilian geography just before the Allied invasion in 1943. DeStefano’s canny insight into the don’s mind and motivations set this biography apart from others on Costello.

    • Kirkus

      May 15, 2018
      Biography of a low-profile "original gangster" who connected the Prohibition era and the "Five Families."Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist DeStefano (The Big Heist: The Real Story of the Lufthansa Heist, the Mafia, and Murder, 2017, etc.) creates another readable, well-researched take on organized crime. Frank Costello (1891-1973), writes the author, "was like the fictional bootlegger Jay Gatsby." Unlike Gatsby, Costello thrived for decades, due to a combination of luck and restraint, even as the American public turned against the gangsters who were elevated during Prohibition. Costello was closely connected to mob heavyweights like Lucky Luciano, and his political connections and aversion to the limelight helped him survive. At the height of his power, Costello and Tammany Hall influenced the nomination of Franklin Roosevelt: "The relationship between the mob and Tammany was one that seemed to be shaped by the reality of their separate worlds." DeStefano acutely re-creates the strange milieu of New York City politics during the peak of organized crime's influence, tracking the interplay among Costello, political fixers, law enforcement, and reformers like Fiorello La Guardia. The author notes that important people "were taken in by [Costello's] smoothness and his persuasiveness." During the 1940s, he was increasingly pursued by righteous prosecutors, offended by his evident impunity. DeStefano follows his trials, concluding, "since 1927, the box score read: Costello 3 and federal prosecutors 0." Despite his attempts at respectability, Costello's notoriety increased, culminating in a 1951 televised appearance. "Of all who testified," writes the author, "it was Costello who represented what [Sen. Estes] Kefauver saw as the face of organized crime." DeStefano tells Costello's story well, yet the nature of his subject's discreet crime philosophy and careful existence limits the author's strengths. Apart from a botched attempt on Costello's life in 1957 organized by Vito Genovese (after which Costello purportedly retired), his story is largely free of violence and dramatic set pieces after Prohibition.Will appeal to readers of criminal histories and tales of New York's political underworld.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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