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The Butcher: Anatomy of a Mafia Psychopath by Philip Carlo
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Philip Carlo Edition: Hardcover Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2009-09-29 ISBN: 0061744654 Number of pages: 320 Publisher: William Morrow
Book Reviews of The Butcher: Anatomy of a Mafia PsychopathBook Review: Gangsters, Gravesend, and the Truth Summary: 5 Stars
I began reading Philip Carlo's the butcher ANATOMY OF A MAFIA PSYCHOPATH at 4 p.m. and remained riveted to this compelling true crime text until its conclusion at12:15 p.m.. Once again, Carlo has brought the literary skills of the narrative to an intensely researched work of non-fiction. It is apparent in this work that several factors have converged in Carlo's writing of the butcher to set it apart from his masterful body of work in this genre: the painstaking detail of Carlo's research into DEA files, the author's seamless merger in revealing the tandem dance of a courageous law enforcement agent with the hunted psychopathic perpetrator, Carlo's visceral knowledge of the underbelly culture of Gravesend Brooklyn's Mafia stronghold in the later part of the 20th century, and this author's 25-year-long study on the mind of the serial killer.
No one could have told the tale of Tommy "Karate" Pitera so succinctly as Philip Carlo has done, and no other author could have unveiled the extraordinary perspective of the valiant DEA agent Jim Hunter (who ended the gruesome reign of this designated Mafia killer)
with such clarity. Carlo engages the reader in a voyeuristic journey into the psychology of a brutal and studied killer as seen through the eyes of his associates, his victims, and his nemesis. This author is one with the rhythms of this crime culture and the choreography of the chase to overtake it. With the fluidity of film, Carlo weaves in and out of the mind of Pitera and the anatomies of his macabre crimes, La Cosa Nostra society, and the machinations of the DEA Task Force dedicated to Pitera's capture. In the butcher we are privy to the makings, the scourge, and the disassembling of a true menace to society.
I am an Italian/American, a high school English teacher, and one who was born and raised in Gravesend Brooklyn at the same time as Philip Carlo and Tommy "Karate" Pitera. The streets of Gravesend have spawned gangsters, senators, scientists, artists, and a righteous working class. Only the truth as told by those who have lived it will rid Brooklyn of the monsters that have preyed upon her. Philip Carlo gets to that truth.
I must post a second five star review On Philip Carlo's The Butcher on behalf of my nephew (a Columbia under-grad student) and his mom( a lifelong resident the setting of this book,Gravesend).Both of these readers borrowed this book from my shelf and were captive by author Philip Carlo's writing and his riveting account of the crimes and capture of Tommy Pitera, Both of these readers are avid fans of the true crime genre and have read Mr. Carlo's work among that of many others in this genre. Both readers were immensely impressed by the degree of expansive research and documented support from DEA files, including official photos, which were an essential reference for this book. And we all agreed as residents of Gravesend Brooklyn that this author truly dug deeply into the mind and origins of this psychopathic killer by using official records and the unbiased accounts of family, associates, accomplices, and victims. As for using interviews with Pitera, at this stage of Pitera's incarceration, his version of the truth would be merely the rantings of a diabolical killer adept at disguise and camouflage.
Philip Carlo exposed the Tommy Pitera and the core of his sickness which remained hidden from family, neighbors, and community for 40-50 years.
Contrary to an especially negative review of this book posted on this cite. Mr. Carlo's writing uses metaphors more compelling than common cliché, allusion to classic authors for content not for citation on a specific text, and fluent usage of colloquial expressions spoken in the vernacular of the setting of this narrative, expressions used commonly and repetitively as literary device in the speech and writing of this particular culture. Perhaps an inexperienced reader of this genre, could be turned off by a slip in editing but, it's only a poor reader who could fail to recognize irony and the use of literary device. The writer of one particular negative review seems to be this caliber of poor reader, or a reader with a specific agenda. It is sad to read an account of a reading experience written by a person who speaks of books as a character in Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 and advises us to throw a book in the trash. Someone whose opinion on the written word is so weighted by emotional and intellectual issues can hardly be regarded as a reliable source of critique.
Please, readers, read on from this excellent forum provided for us so generously by Amazon and damage no books; particularly, not Philip Carlo's The Butcher which exposes the damage that sick people can do.
Summary of The Butcher: Anatomy of a Mafia Psychopath New York Times bestselling author Philip Carlo, one of the foremost chroniclers of the New York Mafia and the criminal mind, returns with a shocking exploration of his most twisted and notorious villain yet Tommy "Karate" Pitera was not like other mafiosi. He was not only a capo in the notorious Bonanno family but also a devoted student of crime?a deadly martial artist who'd been trained in Japan as a teenager. Highly skilled with knives and other lethal weapons, dressed entirely in black, Pitera murdered his way to becoming one of the premier assassins in New York City during the 1980s?he even killed at the behest of John Gotti. Remorseless and deadly, Pitera took human lives as if he had a God-given right, while at the same time dealing high-grade Sicilian heroin and South American cocaine. There were numerous men within the New York Mafia who killed people, men who weren't afraid of anyone or anything, but all of them looked the other way when they saw Pitera coming. Word on the street was that he didn't just whack people; he made them disappear forever. In hushed whispers people spoke of Pitera's secret burial grounds and the grotesque things he did to his victim's bodies. If the Mafia had a Jeffrey Dahmer, it was surely Tommy Pitera. Like his father and grandfather before him, Jim Hunt had a gift for bringing down bad guys. During Hunt's stellar career at the DEA, he had arrested his share of criminals and had caught many of the elusive drug lords of New York City. But nothing could have prepared him for what he encountered when he and his elite antidrug unit began investigating Tommy Pitera. What started as a routine investigation into a cocaine and heroin ring in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, grew exponentially as Hunt and his team uncovered the layers of death that surrounded Pitera. Through carefully placed wiretaps, dangerous stakeouts, and fearful informants, Hunt managed to turn Pitera's few confidants against him, but not before Pitera had killed an estimated sixty people. Offering the first-ever look at the life and crimes of Tommy "Karate" Pitera, New York Times bestselling author Philip Carlo exposes the man behind some of the most horrific murders in Mafia history and the heroic investigator who brought him down. Getting inside the minds of both killer and detective, Carlo masterfully details the delicate and deadly game of cat-and-mouse that resulted in the capture of a Mafia killer unlike any other. A tale of murder, drugs, money, and ultimately justice, The Butcher is Carlo's most frightening portrayal yet of the depraved depths within a psychopath's mind.
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