
Times have changed since the day of the Corleones. America has fragmented, and Puzo’s new family, the Clericuzios, the shadowy power behind the Mafia, is feeling modernity’s centrifugal force. Though still based in New York, the Family has also scattered to Vegas and, as the novel progresses, to Hollywood. Puzo’s protagonist is Cross De Lena, nephew of Don Domenico Clericuzio, his Bruglione in Vegas, who by investing in film may fulfill the Don’s wish to legitimize the Family. But in Puzo’s world, the search for power and wealth demands brutality; dream factories, whether of Vegas or Hollywood, are awash in vengeance, betrayal and blood. Puzo’s take on the film world is scathing, yet there are no caricatures here; his men and women can be seduced by virtue as well as by vice and will throw away a lifetime in pursuit of love. Violence slashes through the narrative, but the real cruelty that laces the plot lies in each character’s byzantine manipulations of others; the story line would delight a Medici. PublishersWeekly