The Talented Mrs. Mandelbaum: The Rise And Fall Of An American Organized - Crime Boss - Hardcover
SKU
9760593243857
ISBN
9780593243855

The Talented Mrs. Mandelbaum: The Rise And Fall Of An American Organized - Crime Boss

$32.00
Author
Fox, Margalit

America's first great organized-crime lord was a ladyā€”a nice Jewish mother named Fredericka Mandelbaum.

"[Fox has] a nose for interesting facts, the ability to construct a taut narrative arc, and a Dickens-level gift for concisely conveying personalityā€ ā€”New York Magazine

In 1850, an impoverished 25-year-old named Fredericka Mandelbaum traveled to New York in steerage and worked as a peddler on the streets of Lower Manhattan. By the 1870s she was a widow with four children, a fixture of high society, and an admired philanthropist. What had enabled a woman on the margins of American life to ascend from tenement poverty to immense wealth?

In the intervening years, ā€œMarmā€ Mandelbaum, as she was known, had become the countryā€™s most notorious ā€œfenceā€ā€”a receiver of stolen goodsā€”and a successful criminal mastermind. By the mid-1880s as much as $10 million worth of purloined luxury goods (the equivalent of nearly $300 million in todayā€™s money) had passed through her modest haberdashery shop on the Lower East Side. Called ā€œthe nucleus and center of the whole organization of crime in New York Cityā€ by the New York Times, she planned, financed, and profited from robberies of cash, gold, diamonds, and silk throughout the city and across the United States.

But Fredericka Mandelbaum wasnā€™t just a successful crook: She was a business visionaryā€”one of the first entrepreneurs in America to systemize the formerly scattershot enterprise of property crime. Handpicking a cadre of New York's foremost bank robbers, housebreakers, and shoplifters, and neatly bribing anyone who stood in her way, she handled logistics and organized supply chainsā€”turning theft into a viable, scalable business.

The Talented Mrs. Mandelbaum paints a vivid image of Gilded Age New Yorkā€”a city teeming with delightful rogues, capitalist power brokers, and Tammany Hall bigwigs, all of whom straddled the line between underworld enterprise and the realm of ā€œlegitimateā€ commerce. Combining deep historical research with the narrative flair for which she is celebrated, Margalit Fox tells the unforgettable story of a once-famous, now-forgotten heroine, a tale that exemplifies the cherished rags-to-riches narrative of Victorian America while simultaneously upending it altogether.

Story Locale:New York, NY

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