kayeness's review

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3.0

An interesting look at a criminal from the distant past.

maddyb001's review

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5.0

It portrays a time in New York that I don't think of very frequently which made the story very interesting. The language was very lyrical and philosophical.

atbrant's review

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medium-paced

3.25

austra_pro's review

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4.0

“You are expecting a monster, but you find only a man.”

Krimiķi man iet pie sirds jau kopš pusaudža gadiem (varbūt pēdējo pāris gadu laikā mazāk), bet “true-crime” stāsti mani nekad nav vilinājuši, jo tur es nevaru aizbēgt no fakta, ka tas tiešām ir noticis, ka tā nav tikai autora fantāzija, ka tie ir bijuši reāli cilvēki, reāli zaudējumi.

Bet kā gadījās, kā ne, manās rokās iekrita šī grāmata. Stāsts ir par Albertu Hiksu, kas 1860. gadā Ņujorkā tika tiesāts par pirātismu (pēdējais tāds), atzīts par vainīgu un pakārts. Tiesu sistēma jau tad bija gana viltīga, un pirātismā viņš tika apsūdzēts, jo viņam nevarēja piešūt lietu par slepkavību, jo no līķiem viņš bija atbrīvojies. Un par zādzību un iespējamām slepkavībām (ja nu kāds šaubās, kāpēc kuģa klājs un kajītes pludo asinīs un visapkārt ir cirvja pēdas) diemžēl tehniski nevarēja piespriest maksimālo soda mēru.

Lai gan šajā grāmatā bija dažas vietas, kas man lika vaikstīties (pārāk izteiksmīgi apraksti), tā mani pārsteidza ar tikpat pārliecinošo ieskatu 19.gs. Ņujorkā, Manhetenas ostā, tā laika dzīvē un tikumos. Zelta drudzis, Ņūorleāna, Meksika, tālie jūras ceļi apkārt abām Amerikām un pāri uz Eiropu - pilni kuģu, kravu un pirātu. Kā nojaušat, šī ir dokumentālā proza, kas brīžiem kļūst pavisam dzejiska. Neviens nezina, cik liela daļa Hiksa dzīvesstāsta ir patiesība, bet man nav nekādu šaubu, kur daudzu vesternu radītāji ir smēlušies savas idejas. Tāpat man nav šaubu, ka es noteikti negribētu būt tai pasaulē pat minūti. Autors patiešām veiksmīgi ir uzbūris tā laikmeta ainas, pievienojot stāstus par citām iesaistītajām personām, bet nepārcenšoties un neaizēnojot galveno stāstu. Bija negaidīti aizraujoši un informatīvi.

“A pirate at forty is like another man at seventy - he has lived so rough for so long and done so many terrible things. He has lost all faith in human nature, turned his back to God. He is the most cynical creature in the world.”

justabookholic's review

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2.0

Actual rating: 2.5 stars

Before I start, I want to add and I don't say this lightly, but I am glad P.T. Barnum's "museum" burned down.

The writing was not for me. I kept thinking there was going be a larger story as the author hints to a wider narrative both in his introduction and in the title but it was just the life of one man. There wasn't anything particularly unique about the man; he murdered for money and he was eventually caught because he was sloppy. It was hardly a new thing then and it certainly isn't new now. He got some notoriety, because other people wanted to make a profit from his story, but he was hardly special. He dressed fancy, killed people on boats, and was hanged for piracy because the detectives couldn't find the bodies; that's it.

korey's review

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3.0

Interesting crime story, but the writing was jarring and random.

chambersaurusrx's review against another edition

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adventurous dark informative fast-paced

3.75

wemedgeway's review

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4.0

I’m not sure if it tries too hard to be something it’s not, or not quite hard enough to be what it could’ve been. Definitely worth reading though. It’s quite interesting. But not quite great.

funsizelibrarian's review

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2.0

If you're interested in the life and crimes of Albert Hicks, this is a thorough and readable account, but the title is misleading. The connection to the "birth of a gangster nation" was non-existent. Additionally, I wasn't a fan of the author's writing style.

zfeig's review

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adventurous informative mysterious medium-paced

3.5

This is classic true crime, amusing to read, but a little dubious on the facts. That said still a cool read, and I learned that the island that the Statue of Liberty is on was a popular place for federal hangings before the statue went up.