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Rating:  Summary: Great book and Good movie Review: By the author of SERPICO and THE VALACHI PAPERS.The incredible but true story of the mysterious, intrigue-filled world of the gypsy -- a world of bloody tribal vendettas and vicious swindles that swirl unseen and unnoticed around us. Most gypsies cling to centuries-old taboos and rituals, don't pay taxes and can't read or write. Yet they flourish from coast to coast, drive Cadillacs and Lincoln Continentals, and have turned thievery into an art form. You will learn how they do it in this irresistible book. A masterful play-by-play expose of gypsy violence, revenge, con games, and shams as well as an amazing collection of gyspsy folklore. A book, like all of Peter Maas novels, that was turned into a movie starring Sterling Hayden, Judd Hirsch, Annette O'Toole, Annie Potts, Eric Roberts, Susan Sarandon, Brooke Shields, and Shelley Winters.
Rating:  Summary: Startling True Story Review: Peter Maas (author or Serpico and the Valachi Papers) writes a startling true tale of Gypsies in America. Anyone interested in true crime, or organized ethnic crime groups, or the trials of people swimming upstream into assimilation after arriving in America will find this book fascinating. Candid without being crude or bigoted, the author treats the subject matter and his protagonist fairly and respectfully. A great companion to <Hastened to the Grave> a true crime paperback about the living cousins of this book's protagonist.
Rating:  Summary: An Ancient Culture - Recorded Review: The Bimgo clan of Gypsies is perhaps the most notorious of allthe clans, according to Peter Maas. For one thing, they operate inNew York and Chicago - gangster towns. But they differ from the Mafiain that they pare primarily con artists and thieves - not murderers(unless cornered) and their women are never prostitutes. SinceGypsies have begun traveling in cars instead of horses and coveredwagon caravans, they've become even more invisible. There are Gypsiesnow on all of the continents of the Earth with many tribes - theKalderasha, the Lowara, Tshurana, Muchwaya, among others. Mostanciently, they were musicians, fortune tellers, coppersmiths - butnever farmers. Now they are all of the above as well as con artistsextraordinaire. "The success of any good con hinges on takingthe victim where he wants to go," quotes the author from a policereporter. "These women are very, very good. You can even go inthere knowing it's a setup, and they'll have you unstrung in minutes.Sometimes when they're operating like that, I think they believe itthemselves." Popular wisdom says they came from India sincetheir Romany language has Sanskrit roots, but they all count in Greek(probably beginning from the time when Alexander the Great brought atroupe of Gypsey musicians, actors, fortune tellers, and metelsmithsto Macedonia). They have intermarried and absorbed cultural practicesfrom every country they have traveled through, but the Roma remaindistinct and independent - and obstinately illiterate. They refuse tosend their children to "Gadje" schools (a Sanskrit wordmeaning warrior - or 'non-gypsey'). If pressure by the local populaceto put their children in school becomes too great - they move on. Butthey didn't move fast enough during the holocaust because almost asmany Gypsies as Jews went to the gas chambers. This book chroniclesthe true story of King Tene and Queen Mary Bimbo - the King and queenof the Gypsies in New York, where they rented store fronts and thewomen practiced the Boojo - an elaborate con game designed to separatewealthy Gadje from their money. In an interview with an old Gypseymatriarch, Aunt Hazel, Maas recorded her statement that, "Allright, she said with a massive shrug, "it's true that we stealwith the hands, but you Gadje - you Americans - YOU steal with thepencils." Her voice rose. "And how many Gypsies you seegoing to jail for 20, 50 years for murderings and rapings andmuggings?" King Tene Bimbo and Queeen Mary had a son, CarranzaTene, an alcoholic, who was disliked by other Gypsies and wasparticularly brutal with his own family. He forced his daughters tomarry while he pocketed the large bride prices (women are veryvaluable to Gypsey cultures as they are ususally the primarybreadwinners - especially now in modern society). Carranza's son,Steve Tene, freed one of his sisters from a hateful marriage, therebyincurring the wrath of his father. But then the old Granfather died -King Tene - and bypassed Carranza, his eldest son, and on hisdeathbed, gave the gold ring and medallion of Gypsey Kingship to hisgrandson, Steve Tene, who is the subject of this book Carranza putan uncharacteristically Gypsey contract on his son's head - attemptingto kill him many times - but the Gypsies honored the old man's lastwishes and gave Steve Tene his grandfather's gold medallion and ring.(There is a picture in the book of the handsome Steve - he looks likeOmar Sherif) wearing the ring and holding the medallion with a bemusedexpression on his face. He didn't WANT to be King of the Gypsies.His only pronoucements as King have been to encourage Gypsieseverywhere to become educated and get into the legitmate professions.They are a very intelligent people. Steve has his champions and hisdetractors. All this stuff is still going on and last I've heard,Steve Tene is still alive and still King. I can't imagine why thisbook is out of print. The author is also the author of *Serpico*. Anexcellent movie was made by the same title and is still available onamazon.com. It stars such notables as Susan Sarandon, Eric Roberts, ayoung Brooke Shields, and even Shelly Winters. The film takes someliberties (has Steve throwing the ring and medallion into hisgrandfather's grave. Didn't happen). But for the most part, themovie follows the book, which is a true story, and yet many are underthe impression that the movie is wholly fiction. It's not. Foranyone who has become as fascinated as I have with this most ancientculture (and I believe their origins are much more ancient than India)this is a must-read. These are real interviews with real people and anumber of interesting photographs of real Gypsies are included - notsome scholarly tome to be moldering away on the shelves of theunread. Peter Maas put all the the investigatory power and insightthat went into *Serpico* into this book, and I think it should see asecond printing...
Rating:  Summary: An Ancient Culture - Recorded Review: The Bimgo clan of Gypsies is perhaps the most notorious of allthe clans, according to Peter Maas. For one thing, they operate inNew York and Chicago - gangster towns. But they differ from the Mafiain that they pare primarily con artists and thieves - not murderers(unless cornered) and their women are never prostitutes. SinceGypsies have begun traveling in cars instead of horses and coveredwagon caravans, they've become even more invisible. There are Gypsiesnow on all of the continents of the Earth with many tribes - theKalderasha, the Lowara, Tshurana, Muchwaya, among others. Mostanciently, they were musicians, fortune tellers, coppersmiths - butnever farmers. Now they are all of the above as well as con artistsextraordinaire. "The success of any good con hinges on takingthe victim where he wants to go," quotes the author from a policereporter. "These women are very, very good. You can even go inthere knowing it's a setup, and they'll have you unstrung in minutes.Sometimes when they're operating like that, I think they believe itthemselves." Popular wisdom says they came from India sincetheir Romany language has Sanskrit roots, but they all count in Greek(probably beginning from the time when Alexander the Great brought atroupe of Gypsey musicians, actors, fortune tellers, and metelsmithsto Macedonia). They have intermarried and absorbed cultural practicesfrom every country they have traveled through, but the Roma remaindistinct and independent - and obstinately illiterate. They refuse tosend their children to "Gadje" schools (a Sanskrit wordmeaning warrior - or 'non-gypsey'). If pressure by the local populaceto put their children in school becomes too great - they move on. Butthey didn't move fast enough during the holocaust because almost asmany Gypsies as Jews went to the gas chambers. This book chroniclesthe true story of King Tene and Queen Mary Bimbo - the King and queenof the Gypsies in New York, where they rented store fronts and thewomen practiced the Boojo - an elaborate con game designed to separatewealthy Gadje from their money. In an interview with an old Gypseymatriarch, Aunt Hazel, Maas recorded her statement that, "Allright, she said with a massive shrug, "it's true that we stealwith the hands, but you Gadje - you Americans - YOU steal with thepencils." Her voice rose. "And how many Gypsies you seegoing to jail for 20, 50 years for murderings and rapings andmuggings?" King Tene Bimbo and Queeen Mary had a son, CarranzaTene, an alcoholic, who was disliked by other Gypsies and wasparticularly brutal with his own family. He forced his daughters tomarry while he pocketed the large bride prices (women are veryvaluable to Gypsey cultures as they are ususally the primarybreadwinners - especially now in modern society). Carranza's son,Steve Tene, freed one of his sisters from a hateful marriage, therebyincurring the wrath of his father. But then the old Granfather died -King Tene - and bypassed Carranza, his eldest son, and on hisdeathbed, gave the gold ring and medallion of Gypsey Kingship to hisgrandson, Steve Tene, who is the subject of this book Carranza putan uncharacteristically Gypsey contract on his son's head - attemptingto kill him many times - but the Gypsies honored the old man's lastwishes and gave Steve Tene his grandfather's gold medallion and ring.(There is a picture in the book of the handsome Steve - he looks likeOmar Sherif) wearing the ring and holding the medallion with a bemusedexpression on his face. He didn't WANT to be King of the Gypsies.His only pronoucements as King have been to encourage Gypsieseverywhere to become educated and get into the legitmate professions.They are a very intelligent people. Steve has his champions and hisdetractors. All this stuff is still going on and last I've heard,Steve Tene is still alive and still King. I can't imagine why thisbook is out of print. The author is also the author of *Serpico*. Anexcellent movie was made by the same title and is still available onamazon.com. It stars such notables as Susan Sarandon, Eric Roberts, ayoung Brooke Shields, and even Shelly Winters. The film takes someliberties (has Steve throwing the ring and medallion into hisgrandfather's grave. Didn't happen). But for the most part, themovie follows the book, which is a true story, and yet many are underthe impression that the movie is wholly fiction. It's not. Foranyone who has become as fascinated as I have with this most ancientculture (and I believe their origins are much more ancient than India)this is a must-read. These are real interviews with real people and anumber of interesting photographs of real Gypsies are included - notsome scholarly tome to be moldering away on the shelves of theunread. Peter Maas put all the the investigatory power and insightthat went into *Serpico* into this book, and I think it should see asecond printing...
Rating:  Summary: THE LIVES OF GYPSIES IN THE UNITED STATES... Review: This is an intriguing work of non-fiction about Gypsies and the lives that they lead here in the United States. It focuses on one particular branch of Gypsies and the clan warfare that made their clan the ascendant one and its leader, Tene Bimbo, the self-proclaimed King of the Gypsies.
The author presents an unvarnished look at Gypsies. He notes their insularity and clannishness, their lives lived on the fringes of mainstream society, and the classic cons by which they survive. Scorning education, nine-to-five jobs, and anyone outside of their cultural milieu, they are a fascinating group of people with their own complex rules and regulations by which they live.
The book also relates an ongoing and violent family feud, between Tene Bimbo's son, Carranza, and his grandson, Steve, Carranza's son. It is a feud that was exacerbated when King Tene Bimbo died and left his legacy to Steve, bypassing Carranza. What was more surprising was that Steve had rejected the traditional Gypsy lifestyle and was trying to lead a more mainstream life, urging others to do the same.
This is a well written, well researched book that provides a fascinating glimpse of a group of people and a lifestyle about which little is known. Gypsies definitely live lives that are outside the parameters of accepted norms of behavior. Those who have an interest in other cultures, as well as those with an interest in the true crime genre, will certainly enjoy this book, which has six pages of black and white photographs.
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