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And it was. This book grabbed me from the very first instant. The craft with which Waller weaves an intricate web of espionage while at the same time portraying every action taken as above board because it is a Swiss action, is admirably and skillfully done. I don't want to give too much of the plot away, but the deceit, double dealing and portrayal of nasty players in a nasty world, is done brilliantly. In this world father will turn against son, uncle against niece, and no-one is above being bribed.
If you are at all interested in espionage, banks and money or even if you aren't, I'd recommend this book as an excellent read. You won't be disappointed.
The "family" is peopled by a collection of flawed and unlikeable characters. I found that I didn't care what happened to any of them. The main reason these people are so unlikeable is because they don't seem to act in character. For instance, the "hero" (at least, I think that's what he's meant to be), Charlie, decides that he wants out of the family so that he can devote his life to philanthropical causes, due to meeting a Hopi Indian woman with whom he has fallen in love. Uh...right. My other gripe is that various plotlines were half-introduced and never completed. For example, Vince the Evil Mafia Man has supposedly killed his first wife for failing to conceive and his second wife is desperate to fall pregnant -- we also have Vince's nephews (at least, I think they were, I lost track of the family relationships because I just lost interest), who could possibly have been fathered by Vince -- so when Vince's wife conceives after having an affair, will Vince be vindicated and proved to be the virile stud that he perceives himself to be? We never find out.
The writing style is rather atrocious and is filled with some of the most horrendous similes I have ever read, as exemplified by: "The hand that held the printed list suddenly clutched it so violently that the paper creased in a dozen angry folds like a washrag used to sponge blood from packets of $100 bills." What is this supposed to mean? I read it three times and still couldn't make sense of it.
Mafia Wars isn't clever, it isn't witty, it isn't particularly well written or plotted and it's almost impossible to identify with any of the characters. We only have Leslie Waller's word for it that the characters are different people. The only distinction that I could see was Good Guys and Bad Guys. I wouldn't bother with this book; it was dreadful.
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