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Hardcover Road to Purgatory Book

ISBN: 0060540273

ISBN13: 9780060540272

Road to Purgatory

(Book #3 in the Road to Perdition Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

A New York Times Bestselling AuthorA Shamus Award-winning Author The powerful narrative follow-up tothe acclaimed graphic novel Road to PerditionIt's 1942, and Michael O'Sullivan is fighting the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Terrific sequel, second in a trilogy

Michael Satariano, formerly Michael O'Sullivan, Jr., son of John Looney's "Angel of Death," has become the one-eyed war hero who won the Congressional Medal of Honor for his service in Bataan. He is looking to avenge his father's murder by the famous Chicago gangster Al Capone, now released from prison but sequestering himself from all but his most intimate fellows (including acting Outfit boss, Frank Nitti) due to the advanced debilitating effects of syphilis. To succeed in doing that, Michael will have to infiltrate the highest echelons of the Outfit, using his apparent Sicilian heritage to his benefit (Papa Satariano, his adoptive father, ran a restaurant that was a favorite hangout of Outfit personnel), and with the full knowledge of FBI agent Eliot Ness, who has kept Michael's true identity a secret (and even assisted with his eventual adoption). Part sequel (Collins considers this a sequel primarily to his Road to Perdition novelization -- the events begin ten years later) and part prequel (four chapters focus on Michael O'Sullivan, Sr.'s, role in a political riot in 1922, his antagonistic relationship with Connor Looney, and the birth of Mike's brother, Peter), Road to Purgatory is, above all, a novel of betrayal. Mike can't seem to keep his word to anyone but himself, not even the too-good-to-be-true hometown girl he left behind when he went to war, and a good deal of the novel's suspense comes from wondering when Frank Nitti, who all but adopts Mike as a surrogate son, will find out the truth. Mike digs himself deeper with each new relationship and things really start to fall apart when someone from his pre-war past resurfaces in the present. The Chicago gangland of the 1920s, '30s, and '40s is author Max Allan Collins' specialty. Eliot Ness, in particular, has appeared in so many of his novels (specifically this and his Nathan Heller series, as well as his own starring series of novels and other media) that it is almost a surprise when he is absent (like in Collins' Disaster series, like The War of the Worlds Murder, featuring mystery writers as amateur detectives). Luckily, Ness plays a major role in Road to Purgatory (though, with Prohibition over, he's pretty much stuck fighting that other social pariah, venereal disease, giving him yet another connection to Capone). Collins' characteristic exhaustive research (he even lets us in on the Outfit's "made man" ceremony) adds considerable depth and atmosphere to this not-so-simple revenge tale, the middle story in a saga named after the three parts of Dante's Divine Comedy. He takes the bold step of making Capone and Nitti sympathetic characters and manages to add Nitti's death into the narrative in a way that does not contradict his earlier dramatization of it in his Nathan Heller novel, The Million-Dollar Wound. And the best part is the saga of Michael Satariano is not over yet, and I can't wait to sink my teeth into the final entry of the saga, taking place primarily in the 197

Fast Paced Excitement

Collins at the top of his form with this terrific sequel to "Perdition." A real page-turner, the author has broken the book into three parts which work seamlessly while leaving the reader dangling in suspense. Using historical figures in the novel make the book just all that more more engrossing. Top notch characterization, ambience, and dialogue, the book is cleverly comprised and not over-long...just right to keep the pulse pounding and the pages flying!

Ness, Capone, and Nitti plus:

Reader review for: Road to Purgatory By Max Allan Collins In our history lessons, we have learned about World War II, but never in the connection between that infamous war and gangster activities. Al Capone, Frank Nitti, and their underlings, had deep-rooted control of so many factors during that war and after. These gangsters wanted, and generally did, control many factors in our nation. Their control led to much killing, most of it very secretive. Max Allan Collins gives us a perspective of all of the above. He takes us deep into the mob and the many, along with their underlings, that controlled the mob. A hero of Bataan from the early years of the war, Corporal Michael Satariano became involved in the mobs when he had returned home because of an accident while he was active on Bataan. He actually started working for Elliot Ness, another well-known name on the FBI side of the law. The activities of Michael, once he became entangled with the mob while working as an insider for the FBI, and attempting to right a wrong done to his father, will turn your minds upside down and get a terrific feel of what times were like during this period of our nations history. You will not want to put this book down. Review written by Cy Hilterman January 17, 2006 cyhilterman@digitalrazor.net

exciting but very bloody suspense crime thriller

A decade may have passed since Capone killed his family, but Michael Satariano nee O'Sullivan never forgot even when he though he was lovingly adopted. Now twenty, Michael is on Bataan where he wipes out a Japanese division, loses an eye, but is a survivor of the death march. Michael receives the Congressional Medal of Honor and an honorable discharge. Back in the States, Michael believes it is time to become the avenging angel of death. Through Papa Satariano, Michael meets Capone's Lieutenant Frank Nitti, who hires him as a welcome addition to the Outfit. Eliot Ness thinks he is exploiting Michael as an insider breaking up Capone's Outfit. As Michael causes destruction, mayhem and death from the inside, back in 1922 in Rhode Island, Michael Sr., the chief enforcer for Irish Godfather John Looney, is about to become a father for the first time, not realizing that the newborn was to become a killing chip off the old block.. This sequel to the ROAD TO PERDITION is an exciting but very bloody suspense crime thriller starring an intriguing protagonist whose soul was sucked out of him a decade earlier. Ironically, Michael's amoral murdering spree as an American soldier and a mob soldier will fascinate readers yet because he is so frozen without even a hint of remorse he is unlikable and the tale fails to show heart. Still this is a solid O'Sullivan next generation entry that contains parallel stories of unaffected 1940s Michael, Jr. vs. the elation of 1920s Michael, Sr. when he becomes a daddy (albeit still a killing machine - must be in the DNA). Harriet Klausner
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