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Omerta

Omerta

List Price: $7.99
Your Price: $7.99
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Puzo strikes again!
Review: I recall the first time I read the Godfather and the resounding feelings of honor and the undercurrent of love and commitment that I was struck with. Sure there are the scenes everyone remembers (horse heads in your bed) but the love of family was the theme that stood out to me in the first Godfather book.

Puzo has done it again. With the third and final installment of the Godfather trilogy we are introduced to the inner workings of the Aprile family. Puzo's magical ability to enrapture the reader into the underworld does not hit short in his final book. Here is a conflict between the Family and the legitimate business world... a world not known for it's overwhelming display of honor where everyone is a sell out. As with Puzos other Godfather books the lines between good and evil are blurred. Family honor, Omerta, justice all intermingles with each characters sense of right and wrong and plays with the readers own beliefs of the two. A more developed characterization of the other Aprile clan would have made for an even richer tale... however, Mario Puzo will be well remembered with this final work.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: On top with Puzo's best
Review: I don't understand why they are giving such a low rating to this wonderful book (less then 5 stars when this review was written!!!). I give it a five stars best! Puzo is a master and this book shows all of his skills. The hook is on the reader as he turns page 1. It is Puzo's last book and the end of the great Sicilian stories of the century. Omerta (which by the way is the Sicilian code of silence) is as breath taking as the Godfather and it even goes deeper into the Mafia world of terminology and its culture. It stands right beside the Godfather and The Last Don. On top, with Puzo's best.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Publisher should be embarassed
Review: This is one of the worst books I have ever read! It seems as if it was written as an outline for the real book which was never published. There was no suspense, no character development, and never caused me to care one way or the other about any of the characters. It was an insult to anyone with an IQ higher than room temperature

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Least favorite of the Trilogy
Review: Ok,I know Mario Puzo could never top THE GODFATHER,and THE LAST DON held my reading attention,but this book for me had not enough of a story. There is the usual Mafia hits,and a couple of small surprizes,but overall I thought it dull.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: The Final Edit
Review: Omerta reflects the tragic loss of Mario Puzo. With more time the characters would have become more real and more rounded. We may have cared about their fate and fortunes. Puzo was only able to project the beauty of Sicily, the richness of the soil and the smell of the olives. The settings are very real. Enjoy Omerta for that. Tolerate the flatness of the characters and their impact on the plot's weakness. Mario's final tribute would have been better with more time.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: More like "Gatsby" than "The Godfather."
Review: It isn't a novel; it's a screenplay, because it depends on the visual, not the narrative. This has been done before, by Dos Passos and F. Scott Fitzgerald, and when it is done well, it creates fast-paced action; when done badly, it produces thin characters with little motivation. That could be the case here, but I'm not sure, because I got the point. America has changed, again, and so have the wiseguys in it. Still, I have trouble believing that a "man of respect" could marry a woman that he had employed as a whore and decoy. Unless Puzo's point is that, finally, one don wised up enough to choose love over money and power! Read carefully; this book is more complex than it looks. It may have been written in haste, with one eye on the film rights, but so was "The Great Gatsby," whose characters are minimalist, too, by design.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Rubbish!
Review: Ridiculous characters and even more riduculous plot. Don't waste your time.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Homage to the Godfathers
Review: Omerta is an interesting fast read,provocative, and lively with surprise twists and turns. The main character Astorre is a complex character who is full of surprises. The beginning and middle of the book is very good, but the ending is a bit hurried and contrived. It will make an interesting movie and will pay homage to the late Mario Puzo.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Disapointing
Review: I was so happy on my way home with "Omerta" in a bag. Then I arrived, began to read, fell in dispair. The story has no rythm. No intrigue. Nothing. Just some characters with no logical behaviors. I'm so sad about it, because I loved the Godfhater and The Last Don.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Disappointing, though mildly entertaining
Review: Godfather it ain't. It kept me turning its pages, but in the end left me feeling like Puzo probably got lazy, and with the publisher on his back, sent in a mediocre effort. It reads more like the outline of of an intriguing mafia saga, than a novel in its own right. The ending leaves much to be desired. Simply put, it's just pulp fiction. It might make a good movie, but the screenplay definitely has some holes to fill.


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