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The Last Madam: A Life In The New Orleans Underworld by Christine Wiltz
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Christine Wiltz Edition: Paperback Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2001-01 ISBN: 0306810123 Number of pages: 288 Publisher: Da Capo Press
Book Reviews of The Last Madam: A Life In The New Orleans UnderworldBook Review: The Last Madam Considered Herself "A Captain of Industry" Summary: 5 Stars
If you enjoyed reading Al Rose's "Storyville: New Orleans" or Herbert Asbury's "The French Quarter" you will like this biography. Norma Wallace comes alive in this well written book. It's easy for the reader to understand how she drifted into prostitution in her teens and why she became madam not long after entering the sex trade. The writer succeeds in showing the reader how and why Norma did the things she did. It's easy to see how she swam in the company of corrupt police, politicians, drug dealers and killer sharks, but didn't really feel she was a "bad person." She was simply fulfilling a very necessary function in society and she did it with as much class as she could. She sold liquor during prohibition and supplied sex to all comers, but she didn't deal drugs, fix gambling activities, rob helpless victims or maim and kill people. She considered her illegal activities "victimless" and she was probably correct in that conviction.
Norma may have been living with one of Al Capone's killers, but she was almost untouched by his life other than when in a jealous rage he attempted to kill her. She had hit men friends who didn't hesitate to take contracts for murder. Her friends liked her well enough to have been willing to kill people for her for free, but that wasn't in her character. She was the very shrewd businesswoman who knew how to bribe, flatter, and keep secrets on her way through a to totally corrupt world that was New Orleans. Her role as one of New Orleans most enduring and successful madams for more than forty years enabled her to know intimately almost every powerful man in Louisiana over several decades. She kept the secrets of three generations of customers without revealing them to the public or the authorities even though everyone in power feared the detailed Black Book she maintained throughout her career. She was wise enough to know how important that coded Black Books was to her survival. She eventually gave up the brothel business and became a successful restaurant owner and real estate investor.
She was a very sexy woman who didn't want to get married and live the American Dream of just having and raising babies. She wanted the freedom and power of the men of the world. She married five times, but none of them lasted because she couldn't resist the siren song of the sex trade or the hot sex provided by young men other than her husbands some of who were young enough to have been her sons or grandsons.
This reviewer found this book refreshing in it's honesty and insights. It is filled with Norma's quotes and colorful observations because during the final two years of her life she taped her stories for a planned autobiography. The author learned as much from listening to Norma's way of talking, laughing, and thinking out loud as from what she was saying. It provided the writer with insights into the woman and her thought patterns than wouldn't have been available from only a written record.
Norma never considered herself a real criminal because her work produced no victims--only satisfied and happy clients many of who became her long-term friends and when she opened her steak house, those long time clients happily introduced their wives and family members to their old friend. Many of these same women whose husbands had cheated on them even after their marriages, enjoyed hearing her endless stories of he brothel life almost as much as the reader of the biography will. It was a different world that Norma Wallace moved in and it included super stars as famous as Charlie Chaplin as well as other less well-known entertainment celebrities. Norma thrived on the cat and mouse game of outwitting the endless line of honest police officials trying to become famous by actually arresting and convicting her. This tale of tail is a bit of a blast: a kind of exciting, touristy voyeurs walk on the wild side.
Summary of The Last Madam: A Life In The New Orleans UnderworldIn 1916, at age fifteen, Norma Wallace arrived in New Orleans. Sexy and shrewd, she quickly went from streetwalker to madam and by 1920 had opened what became a legendary house of prostitution. There she entertained a steady stream of governors, gangsters, and movie stars until she was arrested at last in 1962. Shortly before she died in 1974, she tape?recorded her memories-the scandalous stories of a powerful woman who had the city's politicians in her pocket and whose lovers included the twenty-five-year-old boy next door, whom she married when she was sixty-four. Combining those tapes with original research, Christine Wiltz chronicles not just Norma's rise and fall but also the social history of New Orleans, thick with the vice and corruption that flourished there?and, like Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil and Philistines at the Hedgerow, resurrects a vanished secret world. Actually, they called themselves "landladies" in New Orleans, though that didn't change the nature of their business: running houses of prostitution in the city's wide-open French Quarter. Beginning in 1920, when she was still in her teens, Norma Wallace managed a high-class bordello for an affluent and influential clientele, evading the police and asserting her sexual freedom "like a man" despite the nominal confines of several rickety marriages. Obsessive love for a man 39 years her junior and her first-ever jail term finally put Wallace out of the business in the mid-1960s, but her memories were still vivid and raunchy when she tape-recorded material for an autobiography in the two years before her suicide in 1974. Novelist Christine Wiltz makes good use of those recordings in an earthy narrative filled with great anecdotes, from how the name of Wallace's dog became local slang for an out-of-town customer to the time an undertaker's premises served as her temporary place of business. Wiltz also interviewed many of Wallace's lovers and associates; she draws on popular journalism and scholarly monographs with equal acuity to flesh out Norma's story. Her perceptive biography of a colorful and complex woman is equally satisfying as a social history of 20th-century New Orleans. --Wendy Smith
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