Street Soldier: My Life as an Enforcer for Whitey Bulger and the Boston Irish Mob

· ·
· Steerforth
3.8
6 reviews
Ebook
256
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

Featuring all the trappings of a Scorsese film, this first-hand account from one of Whitey Bulger’s enforcers is “one of the best” insider accounts of life inside the mob (Washington Post)
 
During the 1980s, Edward J. MacKenzie, Jr., “Eddie Mac,” was a drug dealer and enforcer who would do just about anything for Whitey Bulger, the notorious head of Boston’s Winter Hill Gang. In this compelling eyewitness account—the first from a Bulger insider—Eddie Mac delivers the goods on his one-time boss and on such former associates as Stephen “The Rifleman” Flemmi and turncoat FBI agent John Connolly. Eddie Mac provides a window onto a world rarely glimpsed by those on the outside.

Street Soldier is also a story of the search for family, for acceptance, for respect, loyalty, and love. Abandoned by his parents at the age of four, MacKenzie became a ward of the state of Massachusetts, suffered physical and sexual abuse in the foster care system, and eventually drifted into a life of crime and Bulger’s orbit. The Eddie Mac who emerges in these pages is complex: An enforcer who was also a kick-boxing and Golden Gloves champion; a womanizer who fought for custody of his daughters; a tenth-grade dropout living on the streets who went on, as an adult, to earn a college degree in three years; a man, who lived by the strict code of loyalty to the mob, but set up a sting operation that would net one of the largest hauls of cocaine ever seized. Eddie's is a harsh story, but it tells us something important about the darker corners of our world.

Street Soldier is as disturbing and fascinating as a crime scene, as heart-stopping as a bar fight, and at times as darkly comic as Quentin Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction or Martin Scorsese’s Goodfellas.

Ratings and reviews

3.8
6 reviews
deborah elliott
February 1, 2021
Edward J. MacKenzie was sentenced to 12 years in prison in 2015 for defrauding the Beacon Hill Church of Boston,MA. This book first came out in 2003 and was re-published in 2010. This book should be removed as Mr. MacKenzie clearly has not reformed his ways. He is an unreformed criminal and con man.
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About the author

EDWARD J MACKENZIE JR. is a single father raising his two daughters near his hometown of South Boston. 

PHYLLIS KARAS is coauthor of The Onassis Women. A contributor to People magazine and an adjunct professor at the Boston University School of Journalism, she lives in Marblehead, Massachusetts. 

ROSS A. MUSCATO is a strategic communications consultant who lives in the Boston area.

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