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The Deeds of My Fathers

How My Grandfather and Father Built New York and Created the Tabloid World of Today

Audiobook
3 of 3 copies available
3 of 3 copies available

A story that reads like The Godfather has been crossed with Citizen Kane. The Deeds of My Fathers is the riveting true story of two men, a father and a son, who each started with nothing and built an empire.

Generoso Pope, Sr., an Italian immigrant, arrived in New York in 1906 with only pennies in his pocket. He got a job shoveling sand, but through his intelligence, natural leadership, ruthlessness, and ability to woo powerful politicians such as Jimmy Walker and Franklin Roosevelt, he worked his way up to become the biggest provider of cement, just as it was becoming the key building material for New York, vital to landmarks such as Rockerfeller Center and Radio City Music Hall.

Gene Pope, Jr. was his father's choice to inherit and run the business, but Gene's mother and two brothers forced him out, and he found himself penniless and on his own. With a loan from his godfather, mobster Frank Costello, Gene bought the New York Enquirer. He renamed it the National Enquirer and focused on the paranormal, celebrities, and the hopes and fears of Americans. Gene forced the tabloid into the supermarkets and became a powerful media force, peaking with the seven million copies sold of the blockbuster exposé on the death of Elvis.

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  • Reviews

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Pope chronicles his family's publishing empire, which includes the NATIONAL ENQUIRER, in a candid and unvarnished fashion. The behind-the-headlines tales from the NATIONAL ENQUIRER are especially revelatory and interesting. Narrator Keith Szarabajka's mesmerizing voice captures the tone of this memoir as the author unfolds the achievements of his Italian-American family over two generations. His grandfather's construction firm built some of New York's landmarks and created an influential Italian-language newspaper that helped launch the political career of Franklin D. Roosevelt. The author's father turned a struggling New York newspaper into the successful NATIONAL ENQUIRER. This is history on a broad American canvas: twentieth-century immigrants, moguls, U.S. presidents, and Mafiosi carrying out the loyalties and betrayals among them that built the city of New York we know today. B.C.E. (c) AudioFile 2011, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 16, 2010
      Once considered the black sheep of America's publications, the National Enquirer is celebrated on the eve of its 60th anniversary by Pope's powerful biography of its creators, the family patriarchs. The book, which sometimes reads like a straightforward Puzo sequel, chronicles the arrival of Generoso Pope, the author's grandfather on these shores with $10 and no prospects; Gene, Generoso's son and publisher of the scandalous tabloid; and the realization of the ultimate American immigrant dream. Its chapters detail the Pope men's achievements, the grandfather's construction firm building some of Gotham's landmarks and the father's grooming of a struggling paper into a major publication. Crowded with presidents, celebrities, and mobsters, this bio of ambitious alpha males, in a dysfunctional clan worthy of a soap opera, is among the best portraits of Italian-American life to appear in some time.

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Languages

  • English

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