mostraligabue
» » Hit 29: Based on the Killer's Own Account (Adrenaline Classics Series)

ePub Hit 29: Based on the Killer's Own Account (Adrenaline Classics Series) download

by Joey

ePub Hit 29: Based on the Killer's Own Account (Adrenaline Classics Series) download
Author:
Joey
ISBN13:
978-1560254560
ISBN:
1560254564
Language:
Publisher:
Thunder's Mouth Press (November 27, 2002)
Category:
Subcategory:
Specific Groups
ePub file:
1539 kb
Fb2 file:
1874 kb
Other formats:
azw rtf lrf lit
Rating:
4.7
Votes:
910

Perhaps an anti-hero in the form of Joey, a man who may be actually fighting for his own life rather than taking one of someone else

Perhaps an anti-hero in the form of Joey, a man who may be actually fighting for his own life rather than taking one of someone else. While reading the book he does things and recounts past experiences that make you realize he is a criminal. And yet you find yourself hoping he comes out all right in the end.

After the crime-primer success of Joey the Hitman, Hit 29 takes readers on a n journey of one actual hit taken on by Jewish hitman, numbers king, and loan shark "Joey. But the twenty-ninth contract hit Joey has taken on (without a conviction) turns out to be a lot more complicated than it first appears.

The New York Times–bestselling author of Killer: The Autobiography of a Mafia Hit Man reveals the true story of his most harrowing contract murder. Fisher lives in New York.

SIMILAR ITEMS (based on metadata). Terms of Service (last updated 12/31/2014).

ark:/13960/t6nz8xp7j. SIMILAR ITEMS (based on metadata).

Joey the Hit Man: The Autobiography of a Mafia Killer (Adrenaline Classics Series). Get specific details about this product from customers who own it. Back.

Find killer joey from a vast selection of Books. KILLER By Joey Black/david Fischer BRAND NEW.

It's all out in the open - what's tough is determining whether Jackie Sweetlips, the mob's buttonman, is really setting Joey himself up for the kill. You see Joey wasted his best friend Bats a few years before.

Close X. Learn about new offers and get more deals by joining our newsletter.

Following up on the success of the Adrenaline title Mob: Stories of Death and Betrayal from Organized Crime, Adrenaline Classics brings back . Joey the Hitman: The Autobiography of a Mafia Killer (Adrenaline Classics Series). by David Fisher, Joey Black, David Fisher.

Following up on the success of the Adrenaline title Mob: Stories of Death and Betrayal from Organized Crime, Adrenaline Classics brings back the New York Times.

After the crime-primer success of Joey the Hitman, Hit 29 takes readers on a stranger-than-fiction journey of one actual hit taken on by Jewish hitman, numbers king, and loan shark “Joey.” But the twenty-ninth contract hit Joey has taken on (without a conviction) turns out to be a lot more complicated than it first appears. As recounted in Joey’s patented matter-of-fact, regular-guy tone, the target, a low-level numbers “controller,” turns out to be an old acquaintance from the neighborhood, the client is a man who once tried to have Joey hit, and there are enough twists and double-backs—not to mention fascinatingly credible mob details and color—to keep Soprano fans up all night. This New York Times best-seller, soon to be a major motion picture from Paramount, is a true-crime classic.
  • Just got done reading this book loved it,funny serious, a very goof book for organized crime buffs,Highly recommended

  • I liked the book, very interesting.

  • A Classic. As Joey said, The Godfather is the way it ain't, but this is the way it is.

  • It's a classic, written by the hit man "Joey" himself. Takes you step by step though a typical "hit", from the assignment to the preparation to the hit itself to the escape to the disposal of the weapon, etc. A voyeur's delight!

  • This book arrived very quickly and in the condition described. I would do business with this seller again.

  • Love this book! Cold-blooded killer in our society treats what he does like a 9 to 5 job! There are even more out there.

  • In high school for some reason I took an interest in reading books about organized crime. If memory serves me well I began with THE VALACHI PAPERS and move on from there. One book I picked up in paperback was KILLER: THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A MAFIA HIT MAN. It took me a while to get around to reading it, actually when I was in college. It was a fascinating read filled with stories by a man who claimed to have killed a fairly large number of people while never being prosecuted for it.

    That read came in handy when as a member of the programming board at Ball State we brought “Joey”, the author and subject of that book, to campus to speak. He was on tour promoting the book having left that life behind. As a member of the board we all went out to dinner with him that night. He told us stories of his life and later that night spoke before a large crowd with even more tales. Apparently he never left that life behind far enough as I have learned from the publisher that he succumbed a bout of lead poisoning in the form of being shot while at the race track, a favorite locale of his.

    Which brings us to this book, HIT #29. In the book we’re given a few details of the not so friendly attitude Joey shared with another made man who calls him for a meet at a restaurant. The meet was set up by the man’s boss, a hit of someone they’ve discovered is stealing from the mob. The target is a head numbers runner who has systematically been hitting others with his inside knowledge and the help of two low level thugs. Caught and giving him up in the hopes of staying alive, they now know it was this man who set it all in motion. He was someone Joey knew from the neighborhood growing up. Now he’s being offered $20,000 to take him out.

    Joey accepts the job reluctantly having just completed hit #28 not long prior. His rule of thumb is to law low for a while to make sure he’s clear of the first hit before taking on the next. But a bad day at the track and a few other items help him decided to take on this hit. What follows is his step by step routine of how he sets up the hit, how he prepares, the follow through and more. Along the way his suspicions of the man who presented him the job grow as well to the point he begins to wonder if his intended target is that or if he’s being set up to be the target himself.

    The book is written in easy fashion, as if Joey were sitting there talking to you like a friend, recounting the story to your instead of writing it. For me, having met him (or at least the person who said he was Joey) I can see him now. A stout, solidly built man, not too tall with a moustache and slicked down hair, the ring on his hand with a coin surrounded in jewels (he told an interesting story about that to us that night) and a smile and pleasant attitude. And yet he’s a killer.

    At the heart of it all that’s what this book is about, the killing of one human being by another. There is no hero to root for. Perhaps an anti-hero in the form of Joey, a man who may be actually fighting for his own life rather than taking one of someone else. While reading the book he does things and recounts past experiences that make you realize he is a criminal. And yet you find yourself hoping he comes out all right in the end.

    If you enjoy crime non-fiction books then you’ll enjoy this one. It’s a glimpse of the life led by one of the members of organized crime. It tells you how things work, how he worked when performing a hit and provides you with a look most aren’t privy too. With any luck none of us ever will be. But at least we can read about it and be fascinated by the tale.

  • Joey is going to make a hit. Hit number 29 in fact. This time it's a bit strange. He knows the intended victim from childhood, the guy who hired him has a vendetta against him, he's got people following him, and he's not quite sure if the guy deserves what he's getting.
    The book boils down to whether in the end, the victim gets killed, or Joey gets shafted. In order to describe how he kills someone, he describes the events leading to, during, and after the job has been done. While hitting is a great story, the preparation involved, along with the needless and pointless details is not.
    Joey seems to describe his days at the track, his arguments with his wife, how he hates one guy, how numbers are run. Seemingly sidetracked, he sometimes forgets he's hitting a guy and describes the tedious day to day movements of his own life. When he does go back to the hit, the mystery of the victim is fragmented and hardly fluid.
    While interesting in the beginning, towards the later half it gets pretty monotonous, as if delaying the ending in order to fill a few more pages.
    What saves it is that is a true story, and does provide insight to the methodical way a hit is accomplished, along with a description of a life of a New York criminal.