Rating: Summary: Puzo knows his writing Review: Every time I read a book by Mario Puzo, I become more and more impressed with this mans writing style. His books always have a great combination of real world brutality, goodness, sex, and all the other mixes of human experience.His sentences are simplistic and without airs, as are the ideas of the story, and it is this simplicity that gives Puzo's books an elegance that many modern writers lack. Mario is writing about something that is interesting and tells the reader what they need to know when they need to know it. He knows his subject material and creates a world that is interesting as well as believable. Fools die was excellent, and then I read GodFather,and I was very impressed with that book also. I wasn't sure about this book, but I picked it up, and saw that even though it was about the same subject material (I thought it would just be a recounting of the godather), the storyline is fresh, with new characters that become well developmed by the end of the book. Puzo also creates fantastic characters in this book, there is a mold to run by, the old sicilian mafia mold, but the characters in this book are removed by a generation or 2 from this mentality, and it is very interesting to see how Puzo shows their lives as caught in the middle of the mafia life of their parents and grandparents, and the americanized life they lead apart from Quoge LI and the "family". This book was great, and a great read. Any book written by Puzo is worth reading because of his fantastic writing style, this book is no exception.
Rating: Summary: A very readable novel if not quite "The Godfather" Review: This is an extraordinarily readable novel. As always when writing about the Mafia, Puzo tells a great story. This is the story of the Clericuzio crime family and the long range plan of its ruling Don to join the legitimate world and exit the Mafia, with the family wealth intact. This plan is fraught with peril and requires much bloodshed, setting the stage for the story. The Godfather dealt with the Mafia from roughly the 1930s through the 1950s. This novel is more contemporary and appears to be set in the 1990s. Mostly, the story has an authentic quality to it, and it moves along at a very brisk pace. Puzo's prose is clear and makes the book a pleasure to read. Some of the sub-plots in the novel are just plain unrealistic. For example, he explains how a Hollywood attorney and a "California Jury" fails to convict a murderer based on a temporary insanity defense, and a few months later the perp is walking the streets a free man.... But hey, makes a great story, anyway. And make no mistake, this is a minor quibble--this is a great story. Puzo's portrayal of the movie business as being essentially as brutal as the Mafia is hilarious. Is it true to life? I doubt it, but it sure is entertaining. The Last Don was made into a miniseries which is fairly faithful to the novel (Part 1 of the miniseries is, that is). If you enjoy the novel, the DVD of the miniseries is a great entertainment value.
Rating: Summary: Great Mafia Book by Puzo Review: This is the first Mario Puzo book I've read - and I know I'll read more of his! I thought it a great read every step of the way. Although long, every page/chapter moves nicely and it doesn't slow down. This book reminded me of a Sidney Shelton book (or maybe Jackie Collins' Lucky series.) Mario does a great job of detailing the hierarchy in the mafia and the powerplays that go on. Also, this is an epic in the sense it covers many years and many locations (NY, Las Vegas, LA). He intermingles the gambling establishment with Hollywood and the mafia - which makes for an interesting combination of corruption. A fascinating book!
Rating: Summary: Puzo setting the record straight Review: The Last Don is not the book the Godfather is, but it is the next best thing. Easy to read and hard to put down. A return visit to "the Families" is fascinating, and "dance to the bottom of the ocean" is as memorable and usable as "sleeps with the fishes". I found the incredible wealth, beauty and sex of the Hollywood characters a little boring, but the story lines hang together well.
After seeing an interview with Mario Puzo and reading the book, I have a theory. I think Puzo is telling us about his own experience with Hollywood taking over his characters, particularly in Godfather II and, ech! Godfather III. I think Domenico Clericuzio is Vito Corleone guiding the Family to the destiny he and Michael envisioned, instead of the "crime never pays" copout of Hollywood.
Rating: Summary: The Last Don Review: I really liked this book. The reason I first got it was because I knew that Mario Puzo wrote the Godfather and I loved that movie. I decided to get the book, and I was not disappointed. This book is about the workings of Cross DE Lena and the Clercuzio family. Cross and Dante are grandsons of the Don and they make a name for themselves. Cross owns a huge casino/hotel in Las Vegas, and Dante is the The number one hitman for the family. But when a family secret that the Don wants know one to know gets out, there becomes a huge war with in the Family. This is a great book for anyone who likes action our who liked the Godfather. This book shows that after all these years Puzo can still write a great mafia story.
Rating: Summary: The Last Don Review: The Last Don is a very detailed account of a mafia family. It is very interesting with everything that happens in the book; crime, sex, scandal, love, death, kidnapping, gambling. This is not Puzo at his finest but the book is definitely intersting if you like mafia stories. The young Don has to make many decisions while trying to capture the heart of a beautiful movie star. The only thing that annoyed me about the book was the fact that there were so many characters, at times it was hard to follow who was who.
Rating: Summary: Excellent writing, entertaining, and a ripping good read. Review: This is an extraordinarily good read by master author Mario Puzo. It is the story of the fictional Clericuzio Family--the last great Mafia family in the United States. The Clericuzios at the height of the powers are dominant in gambling, drugs, and other related rackets. But the family patriarch, Don Clericuzio, sees organized crime for the dead end that it is, and devises a plan for his progeny to eventually transition to, and enter into the "legitimate world." But his plan envisions this transition to occur on his own terms, so that when the Family indeed abandons crime, it will do so from a position of strength, entering the ordinary world with wealth and prestige. There are problems. Some members of the family are less than enthusiastic about abandoning the underworld, and this is the nexus of the story. Nephew Cross De Lena and Grandson Dante Clericuzio fight what amounts to a secret civil war within the Family, even as the legacy of earlier terrible deeds by the great Don himself finally come home to roost. This is an entertaining and insightful story, well-written. It is equally good with beer and chips, or for a more introspective reader. The book is not without faults. As an attorney, I can only say that Puzo's depiction of "California juries" as regards the insanity defense, is simply asinine, and shows either a contempt for the way things really are, or a simple disregard for facts in order to entertain. OK, I guess, authors are entitled to take liberties with the truth in order to entertain us, I just thought that this particular liberty was unnecessary, since the book seems authentic in so many other ways. Whatever. The novel's treatment of Hollywood is hilarious. Basically, Puzo depicts the struggles of competing studios, actors, and actresses in the entertainment world as essentially a legalized mob conflict, without the guns. I don't know much about Hollywood, so I have no comment about this except to say that here Puzo was pretty entertaining. Overall, this was an outstanding book that makes for an excellent read.
Rating: Summary: 3 1/2 stars - not bad but not great either Review: In The Last Don, Puzo again delves into the realm of organized crime families. He spins a tale of the aging Don of a powerful New York crime family who yearns-and plans-for a day when future generations of his family can transition from the world organized crime to that of legitimate enterprise. As the story unfolds, the Don, who is at the same time a strategic thinker and a ruthless tactician, attempts to influence people and events in order to realize his long-term vision. Along the way, Puzo lays out a wide range of colorful, although stereotypical, characters in a story that brings a variety of disparate storylines together as the book progresses. Puzo effectively moved back and forth from the present to the past to provide depth and understanding. In the end though, the book never really grabbed me or prompted any sleep deprivation due to late nights spent reading. The Last Don was definitely not great, but not bad either.
Rating: Summary: Not as good as The Godfather, but it has a similar feel Review: After reading The Godfather, which I loved, I was eager to read this as well. While it isn't quite as good as The Godfather, which would be pretty hard, it is still very good, and has a similar feel. The story didn't seem as intense as the tale told in The Godfather, but it was engrossing nonetheless. I thought the characters were very well written and I really felt like I knew where they were coming from. After reading this book, I watched the miniseries, which did not nearly live up to the book. If you liked The Godfather, I would recommend reading this as well, but don't expect it to be quite that good.
Rating: Summary: Excellent novel on par with The Godfather Review: The more books I read by Mario Puzo the more I become convinced that the literary world lost one of it's best authors. With his unique ability to fully immerse his readers into his worlds he truly has talent that few authors do. This is the second book in his Mafia series, the first being The Godfather. This one is quite different from that in that The Godfather focused more on those in charge of the Family. THis one looks more at those below, specifficly a Family hitman named Cross and the Don's grandson, Dante. The Don himself is little more then a minor carechter in this novel. At first I thought i might be a bit dissapointed by this but in the end it works brilliantly and keeps this book from being more then just a rehash of The Godfather. Instead it provides another unique point of view into the world of organized crime. For anyone who's looking for an excellent fast paced read this is definetlly the book for you.
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