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Unlocked: A Journey from Prison to Proust by Louis Ferrante
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Louis Ferrante Edition: Hardcover Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2008-03-25 ISBN: 006113385X Number of pages: 320 Publisher: Harper
Book Reviews of Unlocked: A Journey from Prison to ProustBook Review: RICK "SHAQ" GOLDSTEIN SAYS: "A CLASSIC! FROM THE MAFIA, TO PRISON, TO BECOMING AN ORTHODOX JEW!" Summary: 5 Stars
This book is the no-holds barred true story of Louis "Lou" Ferrante's life, which started out as a seventeen-year-old hijacker of trucks in New York. It traces his rise (or dissent, depending on your point of view.) from a teenage criminal who slowly built his own "crew", pulling enough successful jobs and creating enough mayhem to come to the attention of famed Gambino mob leader John Gotti. His connection with Gotti then helped elevate his scores from trucks full of bra's, electronics and garments, to million-dollar armored truck heists. Numerous state and federal convictions including credit card fraud and armed robbery were aided by the lowest form of a criminal organism, the totally despised "RAT"! The words penned in this book are straight from Lou's gut and soul, with no "ivy-league" filtering to "pretty up" the words. I was born in New York and fifteen minutes into this book it was as if I was back on the streets "talkin" with the people I grew up with.
After one of Lou's first big hijackings which was a truckload of tools and toolboxes worth over a $100,000.00 he summed up his view on life at the time: "I was seventeen-years-old, I liked girls. I liked fist fighting; I liked to drive fast cars. I liked hamburgers and French fries. I liked playing stickball in the school yard. And I'd just realized that I liked to hijack trucks." The author describes everyday mob life down to the smallest detail and shares insights with the reader such as ways of "respect" that don't include a gun: "Jimmy the Jeweler" ran alone, didn't need a Mob to make him tough. He took no orders, gave none, and reported to no one. In a world in which fear and muscle rule, Jimmy never even threatened anyone. He was respected because of his word. And everyone liked him." As Lou pulled bigger and better jobs, "Mafia Rats" a heretofore unheard of trend due to the code of "OMERTA" was starting to become a growing phenomenon. At this point in time Lou was so "wrapped up in his "bullsh*t life that he didn't realize that he was rising in the Mafia at the same time the Mafia was in decline."
The "life" that Lou was in, included as many "sit-downs" to settle disputes between different families and "made men" and associates, as it did actual crime. One particularly poetic dispute over a difference of opinion regarding a brother of one of Lou's friends beating up a mob associate, as a retaliation for his having been beaten up by that same mob associate. (understand?) Then the associate ratted to the police. So a meeting between Lou and a representative for the rat went like this: Lou asked: "You sticking up for a rat?" "He ain't no rat!" "He called the cops on my friend." "Yea but he dropped the charges." "So he ain't a rat no more? Is that like I'm only gay on weekends? He dropped im cause I threatened his life, he's still a rat." "It only matters that he dropped im." "Really? Why not take this upstairs." I was referring to John Gotti. "See what he thinks about defendin' a cop-caller, besides somebody going against his own for an outsider." "Listen, between you an' me, your guy hit im wit' a tire iron, that ain't right" "WHATTA WE, IN THE FLOWER BUSINESS? HE'S LUCKY HE DIDN'T SHOOT IM DEAD."
Lou winds up spending almost a decade in prison on multiple charges. Midway through his sentences after simply existing in the daily depravity of a living hell, he is accused of an offense and gets put in solitary confinement for two months. He has an epiphany that gives him the impetus to save and change his life. "When you're released from a concrete box after so long, you feel free, even though you're still in prison. You've been changed forever. In solitary, you talk to yourself. I always had all the answers. For the first time, I had a million questions, and no answers." Lou decides to self-educate himself. After reading everything from Shakespeare to books on Winston Churchill he then read the Gospels, the Koran, the Bhagavad Gita, and studied Buddhism. But the Old Testament (the Torah) was the book for him. "He decided to take a close look at the Jewish people, the Torah's trustees. They were the first to receive the Bible. After all, could G-d have picked the wrong horse?" "He read the history of the Jews, their philosophers, and the Torah over and over; each time it spoke to him anew." Lou converted to Judaism and became an Orthodox Jew. It is not possible to recommend this book any higher than I do! It has it all! And it is truly invigorating after the wild criminal ride that the author takes the reader on, to be able to finish with an emotional aura filled with the beautiful feel of hope and redemption.
Summary of Unlocked: A Journey from Prison to ProustFrom the freewheeling rush of hijacking trucks to the brutal race wars that marked his decade-long stint in jail, former Mafia insider Louis Ferrante describes his remarkable journey from rising mobster to federal prison inmate to full-time writer.
As Louis Ferrante tells it, the bottom line was money?and his word was good. During his teenage years, Ferrante and his crew members hijacked delivery trucks and drove them to drop-offs all over New York, reselling the merchandise and pocketing thousands of dollars per load. For a seventeen-year-old who liked fist fighting and fast cars, it was the quickest money on the street, and it soon earned Ferrante the attention of the infamous Gambino crime family, led by late Mob boss John Gotti. In the early nineties, Ferrante's growing Mafia connections enabled him to pull off some of the most lucrative heists in American history?all by the age of twenty-one. But the same handshakes that once sealed deals soon could no longer be trusted, and the betrayal by several of his close friends brought the feds banging down Ferrante's door. Symptomatic of the nation's larger crackdown on organized crime, indictments came from the Secret Service, the Nassau County Organized Crime Force, and the FBI. By 1994, Ferrante faced a life sentence in prison. He pleaded guilty and would serve nearly a decade in some of the most notorious penitentiaries in America. With raucous violence teeming around him, Ferrante relied on his Mob connections and street smarts to keep him alive?until an unexpected exchange with a guard propelled him to a painful self-reckoning: Who am I? What is it that makes me this way? Do I have a purpose? Desperate to escape from his bleak surroundings, Ferrante immersed himself in the study of history and literature. Over the term of his incarceration, each book became a much-needed sanctuary from the brutal chaos of his everyday existence, each page a challenge to his rapidly expanding knowledge of the world. Ferrante read voraciously?a journey of the mind that took him from philosophy and ancient classics to nineteenth-century fiction. He also learned the art of writing and studied the major world religions, eventually deciding to become an Orthodox Jew. And with only limited access to legal texts, Ferrante taught himself enough about the American justice system to successfully appeal his own conviction, in a case that is now cited in courtrooms across the country. Gritty and hard-hitting, Ferrante's memoir recounts his rapid rise to the upper echelons of the Mafia hierarchy, his time in prison, and his struggle to turn his life around. Unlocked is an astonishing journey?a true story of personal transformation that is both shocking and unforgettable.
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