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Whitey

Gerard O'Neill, Dick Lehr

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Summary

Whitey

By: Gerard O'Neill, Dick Lehr

Narrarated by: John Rubinstein

Drawing on a trove of sealed files and previously classified material, Whitey digs deep into the mind of James J. “Whitey” Bulger, the crime boss and killer who brought the FBI to its knees. He is an American original — a psychopath who fostered a following with a frightening mix of terror, deadly intimidation and the deft touch of a politician who often helped a family in need meet their monthly rent. But the history shows that despite the early false myths portraying him as a Robin Hood figure, Whitey was a supreme narcissist, and everything — every interaction with family and his politician brother Bill Bulger, with underworld cohorts, with law enforcement, with his South Boston neighbors, and with his victims — was always about him. In an Irish-American neighborhood where loyalty has always been rule one, the Bulger brand was loyalty to oneself.

Whitey deconstructs Bulger’s insatiable hunger for power and control. Building on their years of reporting and uncovering new Bulger family records, letters and prison files, Dick Lehr and Gerard O’Neill examine and reveal the factors and forces that created the monster. It’s a deeply rendered portrait of evil that spans nearly a century, taking Whitey from the streets of his boyhood Southie in the 1940s to his cell in Alcatraz in the 1950s to his cunning, corrupt pact with the FBI in the 1970s and, finally, to Santa Monica, California where for fifteen years he was hiding in plain sight as one of the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted. In a lifetime of crime and murder that ended with his arrest in June 2011, Whitey Bulger became one of the most powerful and deadly crime bosses of the twentieth century. This is his story.

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Total File Size: 482 MB (14 files) Total Length: 17 Hours, 33 Minutes

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Patrick Rapa

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Patrick Rapa writes about books for eMusic, comedy for Cowbell Magazine and music for Philadelphia City Paper. He lives in Philly with this like giant bug he tr...more »

04.26.13
A masterful biography of a mobster folk hero that disentangles his convoluted history
2013 | Label: Random House Audio

Some Bostonians used to like to paint James Joseph “Whitey” Bulger, Jr. as a wicked-awesome folk hero. “He robbed and murdered drug dealuhs and mobstuhs!” they said. “Whitey kept Southie safe!” They seemed to forget Bulger was a mobster himself, a man who robbed and killed lots of regular people, burying them all over Beantown since the ’60s.

The authors of this masterful new biography, Boston Globe reporters Dick Lehr and Gerard O’Neill, dispel the modern-day-Robin Hood storyline early, kicking things off with the sickening strangulation of the young and happy Debra Davis — just a lady who got in Whitey’s way. That kind of thing sticks with you, even as the book loops back to the beginning to trace his immigrant roots, working-class upbringing and cruel treatment as a guinea pig in the CIA’s program testing LSD on prisoners. Once he’s out of jail (thanks in part to his politician brother Billy Bulger), Whitey becomes America’s most wanted man — part criminal genius, part reckless psychopath. And the most amazing thing? Until going on the run in the mid ’90s, he was moonlighting as an FBI informant. Turns out the feds were almost as crooked as he was.

Lehr and O’Neill have made a career out of mining Boston’s colorful criminal underworld; in Whitey they make equal use of the official paper trail and anecdotal interviews to turn a would-be procedural into a thriller. Clinical and precise, they lead you through every confrontation, close call and corpse disposal, right up to the worldwide manhunt and his heart-pounding arrest in 2011. By now even Southie has to be happy about that.

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