Gomorrah: A Personal Journey into the Violent International Empire of Naples' Organized Crime System by Roberto Saviano, Virginia Jewiss (Translator)

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(Hardcover - Translation)

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Detailed Rating: "Absorbing" See All

  • Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
  • Pub. Date: October 2007
  • ISBN-13: 9780374165277
  • Sales Rank: 3,946
  • 320pp
  • Edition Description: Translation
 
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The Barnes & Noble Review

Italian journalist Roberto Saviano doesn't hide his agenda in this, his first book -- a passionate indictment of organized crime's stranglehold on his native Naples and its surrounding province of Campania. The fury of his prose sometimes leads him into excess, but the goal is always clear: to name names, bear witness, and celebrate the few heroes who've emerged in the ongoing struggle against the Camorra, Campania's answer to the Sicilian Mafia and the Calabrian 'Ndrangheta. A bestseller in Europe, Saviano's portrait of this modern "Gomorrah" encompasses street-level hustlers and high-living bosses, and the facts, such as can be recorded, suggest a massive underground economy as corrupt as any third-world kleptocracy, and with leaders just as violent. While American tourists enjoy lounging under the Tuscan sun, we might consider that it's very much at the expense of southern Italians who are living on top of toxic waste transported from the North.

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Synopsis

A New York Times Notable Book of the Year



A groundbreaking, unprecedented bestseller in Italy, Roberto Saviano's insider account traces the decline of the city of Naples under the rule of the Camorra, an organized crime network more powerful and violent than the Mafia. The Camorra is an elaborate, international system dealing in drugs, high fashion, construction, and toxic waste, and its influence has entirely transformed life in Campania, the province surrounding Naples. 

Since seeing his first murder victim, at thirteen, Roberto Saviano has watched the changes in his home city. For Gomorrah, he disappeared into the Camorra and witnessed at close range its audacious, sophisticated, and far-reaching corruption that has paralyzed his home city and introduced the world to a new breed of organized crime.

The Washington Post - Anthony Shugaar

…in October, an Italian business association reported that the largest sector of the country's economy is organized crime, accounting for an estimated 7 percent of its gross domestic product. That's $127 billion, more than twice the annual revenue of Microsoft. To put flesh on that unsettling X-ray of Italian life, read Roberto Saviano's astonishing Gomorrah. The book is subtitled "A Personal Journey Into the Violent International Empire of Naples' Organized Crime System," and both personal and violent it is. Saviano's tour of his native Naples shows us the heart of what can only be called a company town for organized crime, with industrial toxins in great abundance…Saviano gallops straight into the maw of the inferno, using a hard-boiled style that has only begun to take root in Italian media. Naples is where he grew up, the Neapolitans are his people, and while the eyewitness accounts he brings to the page—stories of murderous barbarity and devastating debasement—could have been told by one of Dashiell Hammett's chilly protagonists, Saviano is no cold-blooded cynic. If there is a literary model at work here, it might be the Lamentations of Jeremiah.

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Biography

Robert Saviano was born in 1979 and studied philosophy at the University of Naples. Gomorrah, his first book, has won many awards, including the prestigious 2006 Viareggio Literary Prize. After its publication, he was placed under police protection.

Customer Reviews

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  • Ratings: 7Reviews: 1

5 Starts for courage: He broke the silence and risked his lifeby Anonymous

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February 29, 2008: If you have been to Italy, surely you have seen people who sell counterfeit goods on the street ? Prada purses, Gucci belt, Armani wallet, pirated CD and DVD, etc. Surprisingly, most of them are not made in China, but in underground factories in Naples, the same type of factories that makes dresses for Hollywood stars. This is however, only the beginning of the story. This is a story of the underground economy of Naples, the desperation of its society and underclass, and the exploitation by the sophisticated yet short sighted criminals. The tales are not unlike those of the underground economy of New York and Chicago, but southern Italian style. With my busy schedule running a business, these days it's hard for me to take some time and read a book in a short time. However, this book was so compelling I finished it in four days. There are three big criminal organizations in Italy: Cosa Costra (commonly known as Mafia) from Sicily, `Ngrangheta of Calabria, and the Camorra of Campania. This book is about the camorra. First, to understand why the author is under 24-hour police protection: This is not the first book written about the camorra or the mafia, in Italy or abroad. However, his story telling style was compelling enough to make the book a best seller in Italy and abroad. This brought to light the dirty and dark secrets of the criminal underworld in a concrete term - something you can identify with (do they control what you eat?), it infuriates you and something you react strongly. It's not just about talking about the camorra in abstract terms, but to name names, name places, and describe in vivid details about the people, their ?businesses?, and places. So the public realize the extent of the problem and how it affects the smallest things like milk and cookie delivery to cancer rates. Organized crime societies thrives on secrecy and silence, there is a term for silence among the camorra 'omerta'. If no one speaks about it and carry on with his life, or speak about it in an abstract term like 'oh it's the mafia what can I do about it?' then the camorra carries on their activities. However, with the amount of attention the author brought, especially attention to details, angered the criminals because the public gets a real view of how the system function and is lubricated. Hence they want the author dead. He broke the code of 'omerta'. That's why police protection is assigned to him. Remember, if you dare to speak up against their interest, they dare to silence you in the most callous way - school teacher, shop owner, ex-member, judge, lawyer, politicians, it doesn't matter. The book shows that while claiming to be Catholics, the Camorra is even willing to take the life of a priest. I lived in that region. In fact, where I lived had its government dissolved more times than any other places in Italy due to mafia infiltration. I have seen around here urban planning disaster, environmental disaster, and cultural disaster. While the region of Campania has some beautiful parts, it is not far fetched to say it?s a third world country within a major EU country. This book explores many subjects that I have witnessed with my own eyes: the annual garbage crisis where you can?t even walk on the sidewalk, and the hoodlums and idiots who set the trashes on fire to worsen the crisis the store that was burned down because the owner was courageous and refuse to pay the Camorra a 'protection' fee the unjustifiable...