Bair discovers a rich trove of legends — one that reverberates with the romance of ethnic America four and five generations removed from the immigrants themselves. But that’s the problem: The living relatives are too young to shed much light on the gangster and his times ... Where Bair makes a major contribution is not so much in retelling the Capone legends but in reappraising them. She deftly sifts through the famous stories for half-truths and fictions ... Bair is a wise and often iconoclastic guide through Capone mythology.
Using remembrances from Capone’s descendants, particularly three granddaughters, Bair paints a fuller and more intimate picture of the gangster ... The narrative of Capone’s rise and fall frequently comes to a halt because of the biographer’s tendency to present several versions of a Capone story, then decide which is probably true. That kind of detour is better left to the footnotes. That said, Capone provides tremendous insight into the man who, decades after his death, may be the best-known Chicagoan of all time.
In the end, however, Bair's book does not live up to this promise. Her focus on Capone's family life, marginalizing details of his criminal endeavors, is unbalanced. She pays scant attention to Capone's legacy, the ongoing history of organized crime since he helped create the Chicago Outfit. Finally, a single concluding chapter covers the 'legend,' the presence of Capone in popular culture and memory, more a gesture than an actual examination ... Al Capone still awaits the biographer who can fully untangle, and balance, the complexities of his life.
Bair would have done well to include more of this [Prohibition era] context upfront, to highlight how disruptive the Volstead Act was ... While Bair spends much time — too much of it — trying to clear the clutter of Capone myth, she is at her strongest when she gets out of the biographical weeds and gives us a feel of the era. Her most articulate associations of Capone and his times come in the final chapter, and one wishes they’d come earlier ... Bair’s account of the trial is detailed and vital ... While this book is uneven, and significantly more vivid about Capone’s downfall than his reign, Bair’s descriptions of how the world’s preeminent villain spent his final years exercising the mental capacity of a child, close the work on a poignant note.
Bair has capitalized on interviews with Capone’s descendants. The result is an engaging biography that debunks many, many myths about Capone and captures him as a complex person ... Bair’s account does generate considerable sympathy for Capone ... But Bair does not provide satisfactory answers to the most fundamental conundrum posed by Capone’s descendants: How could a person 'be so admirable and still be guilty of the terrible things he did?'”