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The Incorruptibles: A True Story of Kingpins, Crime Busters, and the Birth of the American Underworld

Exuberant ... Write[s] in a breezy, fast-paced style. [He] revel[s] in the Dickensian details of the demimonde — the colorful lingo, intricate professional techniques and social snobberies of the criminal classes — looping through decades of political and economic history that spills over into chatty footnotes.
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Slater...has produced a deeply researched and fluidly written chronicle ... A useful corrective to the conventional picture of what life was like on those mean streets.
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is book is, as one would expect from a jour­nal­ist, col­or­ful and dra­mat­ic. It’s writ­ten in a light and folksy man­ner that brims with his­to­ri­o­graph­i­cal clichés, invent­ed dia­logue, and mem­o­rable per­son­al­i­ties ... While Slater’s book is true, it does not explore how Jews’ crim­i­nal behav­ior was influ­enced by cul­ture and reli­gion, nor does it com­pare city lead­ers’ response to crime by Jews to crime com­mit­ted by oth­er eth­nic groups. Some read­ers might be dis­ap­point­ed by its fail­ure to exam­ine the larg­er eco­nom­ic and social fac­tors that led to Jews’ par­tic­i­pa­tion in crime. How­ev­er, The Incor­rupt­ibles is sure to attract a wide audience.
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