Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Snorky

The Confessions of Al Capone by Loren Estleman

December 20, 2020 by Jake Leave a Comment

This one is a tough book to pull off. There’s already tons of bs associated with the legend of Al Capone that it’s tough to discern the truth. Fortunately, Loren Estleman, a writer who I’ve been meaning to read for a very long time, gets it well. Estleman’s research is incredible. I read Max Alan Collins’ Scarface and the Untouchable before this so a lot of it was fresh in my head. I figured he (Estleman) might fudge the facts in order to tell a more compelling […]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Al Capone, Chicago, crime, Florida, historical fiction, Loren Estleman, prohibition, Roman Catholicism, The Confessions of Al Capone

Jake's CBR12 Review No:189 · Genres: Uncategorized · Tags: Al Capone, Chicago, crime, Florida, historical fiction, Loren Estleman, prohibition, Roman Catholicism, The Confessions of Al Capone ·
Rating:
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The Chicago Way

Scarface and the Untouchable: Al Capone, Eliot Ness, and the Battle for Chicago by Max Alan Collins

December 9, 2020 by Jake Leave a Comment

I’ve been waiting for this book for years. There are so many works out there about Al Capone, most of them more fact than fiction, few of them recounting the gritty details of his battles with Eliot Ness during Prohibition. The Untouchables movie is more fantasy than reality, so was the TV show, depicting a Manicheean struggle between good and evil, law and order, etc. I wanted something that covered the full details of how these two met on the playing field of Chicago and what actually […]

Filed Under: Non-Fiction Tagged With: Al Capone, Chicago, Eliot Ness, Max Alan Collins, prohibition, Scarface and the Untouchable, The Untouchables, true crime

Jake's CBR12 Review No:184 · Genres: Non-Fiction · Tags: Al Capone, Chicago, Eliot Ness, Max Alan Collins, prohibition, Scarface and the Untouchable, The Untouchables, true crime ·
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Where the Gin is Cold

Murder Knocks Twice by Susanna Calkins

October 15, 2019 by Jake Leave a Comment

Read this one with my wife. This is our co-review. I liked it well enough for a first book in the series, though I’m not sure I’ll continue. Susanna Calkins gets the era well enough without having to resort to too many cliches. I like the world she builds and the mystery is interesting enough, if not overly complex. After a rocky start, it really catches itself and I was engaged to the end. The problem I had with the story, and the reason why […]

Filed Under: Mystery Tagged With: Chicago, Gina Rizzo, Murder Knocks Twice, mystery, prohibition, Susanna Calkins

Jake's CBR11 Review No:107 · Genres: Mystery · Tags: Chicago, Gina Rizzo, Murder Knocks Twice, mystery, prohibition, Susanna Calkins ·
Rating:
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Shoulda Beena Contenda

Button Man by Andrew Gross

October 14, 2019 by Jake Leave a Comment

Button Man is my first Andrew Gross novel and it may be my last. Not because it’s bad; at three stars, it’s definitely not. But because it’s bland, predictable, uninspiring. And with a set up that’s right in my wheelhouse: gangsters, Prohibition, New York, etc., I should’ve liked it a lot more than I did. Positives: Gross does get the era of 30s New York right. Supposedly, this story was inspired by tales of his family, some of whom were Jewish immigrants from Russia. I don’t […]

Filed Under: Mystery Tagged With: Andrew Gross, Button Man, historical fiction, Judaism, mystery, New York City, prohibition

Jake's CBR11 Review No:106 · Genres: Mystery · Tags: Andrew Gross, Button Man, historical fiction, Judaism, mystery, New York City, prohibition ·
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Gangster Gangster

Legs by William Kennedy

October 4, 2019 by Jake Leave a Comment

In my mid-20s, with far less patience than I currently possess, I tried reading EL Doctorow’s acclaimed novel Billy Bathgate. As I should have known, it was too dry, too literary for my taste. I want to revisit it soon as I’m sure my sentiment towards it now would be different. Nevertheless, I don’t understand how anyone can write a Prohibition era novel, even one with literary aspersions, and not have fun with it. Legs is the book I wish Billy Bathgate was back in my 20s. It’s literary […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Albany, fictional biography, Legs, prohibition, William Kennedy

Jake's CBR11 Review No:102 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Albany, fictional biography, Legs, prohibition, William Kennedy ·
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Dead Dogs and Radium Girls

The Poisoner's Handbook by Deborah Blum

May 5, 2019 by CoffeeShopReader Leave a Comment

The Poisoner’s Handbook is one of those rare non-fiction books that reads more like fiction. The basic narrative follows the head medical examiner of New York City and his chief toxicologist as they essentially help invent forensic science during Prohibition. Each chapter focuses on the problems, mostly murders, that revolve around a particular chemical compound including chloroform, wood alcohol, arsenic, radium, carbon monoxide, and thallium. There’s a lot of chemistry involved but it’s explained in a way that someone who hasn’t taken the subject since […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, History, Non-Fiction Tagged With: #history, alexander gettler, charles norris, chemistry, deborah bloom, forensic science, legal history, murder, New York City, prohibition, the poisoner's handbook

CoffeeShopReader's CBR11 Review No:26 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, History, Non-Fiction · Tags: #history, alexander gettler, charles norris, chemistry, deborah bloom, forensic science, legal history, murder, New York City, prohibition, the poisoner's handbook ·
Rating:
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