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PEPPERMINT TWIST

THE MOB, THE MUSIC, AND THE MOST FAMOUS DANCE CLUB OF THE '60S

A fun and fascinating read.

True crime meets pop-music history in this history of the Peppermint Lounge, the Twist and the Mafia’s unwitting role in starting a national craze.

In 1960, Dick Cami’s father-in-law, Johnny Biello, a high-ranking Mafioso, bought an off-Broadway dive as a favor to a friend, and Cami suggested having rock ’n’ roll music in the place. Within months, the Peppermint Lounge became the hottest club in the country, as New Jersey teens mixed with such celebrities as Norman Mailer, Ava Gardner and even the Beatles—all doing the Twist. “The Twist hit like an atomic bomb and the Peppermint Lounge was ground zero,” write veteran journalists Johnson (co-author: Blood Brothers: The Inside Story of the Menendez Murders, 1994) and Selvin (Summer of Love: The Inside Story of LSD, Rock & Roll, Free Love and High Times in the Wild, 1994, etc.). All of this surprised Biello, who saw the place as a nice front for his loan-sharking and gambling rackets. However, not one to pass up a buck, he let Cami make the place legit and even opened a second lounge in Florida. The authors go back and forth between telling the stories of Biello’s rise in the Mafia and his constant attempts to get out and the rise of the Twist. Biello’s tale is one of Mafia intrigue and Runyonesque figures such as his younger brother Scatsy, while the tale of the Twist is one of the early rise of youth culture, which would soon become a revolution. It’s also the story of a young singer named Chubby Checker, who, once spotted by pop-music king Dick Clark, made a career out of the song “The Twist” (originally recorded by Hank Ballard and the Midnighters) and how every singer from Sam Cooke to Frank Sinatra made a Twist record. The two stories shouldn’t fit, but they do.

A fun and fascinating read.

Pub Date: Nov. 13, 2012

ISBN: 978-0-312-58178-7

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Dunne/St. Martin's

Review Posted Online: Sept. 14, 2012

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 2012

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MURDER IN SPOKANE

CATCHING A SERIAL KILLER

Mostly forsaking sensationalism for plodding detail, Fuhrman disappoints: this is only for people interested in the tedious...

The grisly account of a Spokane, Washington, serial killer’s spree, and a critique of the local police department’s investigation of the crimes.

On October 19, 2000, Robert Yates pled guilty to the murder of 13 women. According to detective-turned-journalist Fuhrman (Murder in Greenwich, not reviewed), the killer could have been apprehended two years earlier. The author traces the Yates case as it unfolds through the late 1990s. He may have left police work for journalism and a ranch in Idaho, but he was anything but a disinterested citizen when dead women began appearing at various dumping sites in the Spokane area. In fact, Fuhrman and his colleague, radio co-host Mark Fitzsimmons, began to explore the murders themselves. The author presents a detailed diary of their investigations, laying out a blow-by-blow recounting of each body’s discovery, the atmosphere of the crime scenes, and the possible thoughts of the killer. At the same time, Fuhrman documents the Spokane police department’s reluctant handling of the case, its insularity, and its refusal to release substantive details to the public. Indeed, for a long while, the department refused even to acknowledge the existence of a serial killer. In his unofficial search, the author repeatedly turned up witnesses who were never questioned and leads that were never followed. He concludes with a close analysis of the arrest affidavit, substantiating his allegation that the department could have caught the culprit years earlier if they had relied less on their computer database and DNA testing, and more on investigating phoned-in leads with basic police work. Although he claims that “the last thing [he] wanted to do was second guess them,” Fuhrman has little patience with the Spokane police; his tone is that of an indignant everyman wondering what the clowns in uniform were doing.

Mostly forsaking sensationalism for plodding detail, Fuhrman disappoints: this is only for people interested in the tedious nitty-gritty of apprehending a killer.

Pub Date: June 1, 2001

ISBN: 0-06-019437-5

Page Count: 304

Publisher: N/A

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2001

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COMRADE CRIMINAL

RUSSIA'S NEW MAFIYA

The most thorough and comprehensive assessment published to date of the extent and seriousness of criminal activity in Russia. Handelman, Moscow bureau chief for the Toronto Star from 1987 to 1992, provides an unprecedented degree of detail to document prevailing charges of the pervasiveness of organized crime, which allegedly accounted for 30 to 40 percent of national turnover in goods and services in 1993, according to Russian law enforcement agencies. Handelman rightly points out the difficulty of arriving at an agreed definition in a country where high taxes and red tape make it hard for business to be conducted honestly. But among the useful points he makes are that smuggling and the black market had become vital to the functioning of the state in the last 20 years of the Soviet Union's existence—which gives, as he says, new meaning to the phrase ``evil empire.'' The KGB and government officials have commandeered the whole process of privatization. And despite repeated declarations of war on crime, the government has failed to deal with the phenomenon. (Some statistics are ambiguous, however. Numbers showing how widespread corruption is—in 1993, 46,000 officials from all levels of government were tried on charges of corruption or abuse of power—could also prove the diligence and incorruptibility of those bringing the charges). Finally, according to Handelman, this wave of criminality has led not only to a disenchantment with capitalism, but to ``an overwhelming sense of defeat.'' While Handelman disclaims pessimism and pays tribute to the ingenuity and grit of many Russians, his last chapter, titled ``Who Lost Russia?,'' is not reassuring. Somewhat journalistic in style, but a careful and serious- minded effort to understand the significance of a pervasive criminality that threatens the structure of the state.

Pub Date: June 14, 1995

ISBN: 0-300-06352-0

Page Count: 416

Publisher: Yale Univ.

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 1995

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