Excellent Cadavers: Mafia and the Death of the First Italian Republic
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #60544 in Books
- Published on: 1996-06-06
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 448 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino set out to destroy the Mafia. In 1992, aware that the magistrates didn't have the support of the Italian government, the Mafia assassinated them. The public outcry demanded their work was completed, which led to the toppling of crucial political alliances.
Customer Reviews
Best true crime book I've read
I like reading about dedicated experts in a particular field. In this case, Judges Falcone and Borsellino, and others, taking on the mafia. It really is an interesting, shocking and moving story.
Brilliant story of modern Sicilian history.
Stille's book shows a side of Sicily and Italy that most of us are vaguely aware of,but submerge in "Godfather"-style cliches.
The Sicilian mafia are far more horrific than the Hollywood rendition,living off the misery of terrified Sicilians.Stille points out Mafia control of heroin traffiking(leading to the zombie-like world of junkiedom for many young Sicilians),protection rackets,tax fraud and their links with corrupt politicians are a cancer inside Sicilian and Italian society.Note well that the first victims of the Mafia,either in Italy or in the Italian diaspora worldwide,are other Italians-so much for the Mafia as being somehow protecting Italians.
The other side of Stille's story is the suicidal bravery of a small number of Siclilian prosecutors,policemen and politicians,led by Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino,and their efforts to fight back against the Mafia.The excellent cadavers of the tiltle are of those Italians who got in the way of the Mafia,and they are a long list of politicians,policemen,lawyers,journalists,even people who worked in drug rehabilitaion clinics who denounced drug dealing.
The climax of the book is the summer of 1992,when Falcone and Borsellino,after some epochal cases left many mafioso facing non-appealable life sentances,became the latest of the excellent cadavers.The simultaneous popular backlash against the mafia in Sicily,and the death throes of the first Italian republic(drowning in corruption partially fuelled by the mafia)is brilliantly portrayed.
Stille's final message is that the mafia isn't dead,just sleeping.Even after the birth of the second republic,given the right political environment(such as Silvio Berlusconi becoming prime minister in Rome),they could return even more powerful than before.
Stille clearly loves Italy,and that gives the book an added poignancy.Must read for crime buffs,students of Italian history or politics,or anyone visiting Sicily.
gripping!
no doubt the most definitive account of the anti-mafia trials and tribulations in englsh.
"stille has stlye"
superbly written !




