Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

George Anastasia

American journalist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

George Anastasia (born February 5, 1947) is an American author and former writer for The Philadelphia Inquirer. He is widely considered to be an expert on the American Mafia.[1][2][3] He was an organized crime investigative reporter, who was once targeted for death by then-Philadelphia crime family boss John Stanfa.[4] He won the Sigma Delta Chi Award and has also been described on a 60 Minutes television profile as "One of the most respected crime reporters in the country."[1] Anastasia lives in Pitman, New Jersey.[5]

Quick facts Born, Occupation(s) ...
Remove ads

Early life and education

Anastasia was born in South Philadelphia and raised in Westville in South Jersey.[6] He graduated from Gloucester Catholic High School in 1965 and earned a BA in French literature from Dartmouth College.[5] He also studied at Swarthmore College and the University of Florida.

Career

Summarize
Perspective

Anastasia has served as an adjunct professor and lecturer at Glassboro State College, now called Rowan University, Temple University, and has been a lecturer for the U.S. State Department-sponsored series of weeklong seminars on journalism and organized crime in Bulgaria (2004 and 2007), Croatia (2005), Serbia (2006), and Italy (2007).[7]

He is the author of six books, including The Last Gangster (ReganBooks/Harper Collins, March 2004), a New York Times bestseller, which chronicles the demise of the Philadelphia mob. His other books are Blood and Honor (William Morrow & Co., 1991), which Jimmy Breslin called "the best gangster book ever written"; New York Times bestseller The Summer Wind (Regan Books/HarperCollins, 1999) about the Thomas Capano-Anne Marie Fahey murder case, and The Goodfella Tapes (Avon Books, 1998), Mobfather (Kensington Books, 1993), and The Ultimate Book of Gangster Movies (Perseus Books, 2011), co-authored with Glen Macnow. He has written for Penthouse, Playboy, and The Village Voice. He also has been featured on several network television news magazine reports about organized crime and has worked as a consultant on projects for ABC, Discovery Channel, History Channel, and National Geographic Channel.[citation needed]

Anastasia is the author of a novella, The Big Hustle (Philadelphia Inquirer Books, 2001), and has contributed to two anthologies of Italian American writers, A Sitdown with the Sopranos and Don't Tell Momma. Mob Files, an anthology of articles he has written for The Inquirer, was published in September 2008 by Camino Books.[7]

Anastasia hosts a YouTube channel called "MobTalk" along with FOX 29's Dave Schratweiser, which provides updates on the organized crime world.[8]

Remove ads

Bibliography

  • Blood and Honor: Inside the Scarfo Mob, the Mafia's Most Violent Family (1991)
  • Mobfather: The Story of a Wife And Son Caught in the Web of the Mafia (1993)
  • The Goodfella Tapes (1998)
  • The Summer Wind: Thomas Capano and the Murder of Anne Marie Fahey (1999)
  • The Big Hustle (2001)
  • The Last Gangster (2004)
  • Mobfiles: Mobsters, Molls and Murder (2008)
  • Philadelphia True Noir: Kingpins, Hustles and Homicides (2010)
  • The Ultimate Book of Gangster Movies (2011)
  • Gotti's Rules: The Story of John Alite, Junior Gotti, and the Demise of the American Mafia (2015)[9]
  • Doctor Dealer (2020)

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads