Mario Puzo Popular Books

Mario Puzo Biography & Facts

Mario Francis Puzo (; Italian: [ˈmaːrjo ˈputtso, -ddzo]; October 15, 1920 – July 2, 1999) was an American author and screenwriter. He wrote crime novels about the Italian-American Mafia and Sicilian Mafia, most notably The Godfather (1969), which he later co-adapted into a film trilogy directed by Francis Ford Coppola. He received the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for the first film in 1972 and for Part II in 1974. Puzo also wrote the original screenplay for the 1978 Superman film and its 1980 sequel. His final novel, The Family, was released posthumously in 2001. Personal life Puzo was born in the Hell's Kitchen section of New York City to Italian immigrants from the Province of Avellino in Campania. His father was from Pietradefusi and his mother from Ariano Irpino. When Puzo was 12, his father, who worked as a trackman for the New York Central Railroad, was committed to the Pilgrim State Hospital for schizophrenia, and his wife Maria was left to raise their seven children. Puzo served in the United States Army Air Forces in Germany in World War II, and later graduated from the City College of New York. Puzo married a German woman, Erika, with whom he had five children. When Erika died of breast cancer at the age of 58 in 1978, her nurse, Carol Gino, became Puzo's companion. Career In 1950, his first short story, "The Last Christmas," was published in American Vanguard and republished in the 1953 anthology New Voices: American Writing Today #1. After the war, he wrote his first book, the novel The Dark Arena, which was published in 1955. In 1960, Bruce Jay Friedman hired Puzo as an assistant editor of a group of men's pulp magazines with titles such as Male, Men. Under the pen name Mario Cleri, Puzo wrote World War II adventure features for magazine True Action. A November 1965 short story, "Six Graves to Munich", was expanded into a novel in October 1967, and adapted into a film in 1982. In 1969, Puzo's best-known work, The Godfather, was published. Puzo stated that this story came from research into organized crime, not from personal experience, and that he was looking to write something that would appeal to the masses. The novel remained on The New York Times Best Seller list for 67 weeks and sold over nine million copies in two years. The book was later developed into the film The Godfather (1972), directed by Francis Ford Coppola. Paramount Pictures originally found out about Puzo's novel in 1967 when a literary scout for the company contacted then Paramount Vice President of Production Peter Bart about Puzo's unfinished sixty-page manuscript. Bart believed the work was "much beyond a Mafia story" and offered Puzo a $12,500 option for the work, with an option for $80,000 if the finished work were made into a film. Despite Puzo's agent telling him to turn down the offer, Puzo was desperate for money and accepted the deal. Paramount's Robert Evans relates that, when they met in early 1968, he offered Puzo the $12,500 deal for the 60-page manuscript titled Mafia after the author confided in him that he urgently needed $10,000 to pay off gambling debts. The film received three awards of its 11 Oscar category nominations, including Puzo's Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay. Coppola and Puzo then collaborated on sequels to the original film, The Godfather Part II (1974) and The Godfather Part III (1990). Coppola and Puzo preferred the title The Death of Michael Corleone for the third film, but Paramount Pictures found that unacceptable. In September 2020, for the film's 30th anniversary, it was announced that a new cut of the film titled Mario Puzo's The Godfather, Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone would have a limited theatrical release in December 2020 followed by digital and Blu-ray. Coppola said the film is the version he and Puzo had originally envisioned, and it "vindicates" its status among the trilogy. In mid-1972, Puzo wrote the first draft of the script for the 1974 disaster film Earthquake, but he was unable to continue work because of his prior commitment to The Godfather Part II. Work continued on the script without his involvement, with writer George Fox (working on his first, and only, motion picture screenplay) and producer / director Mark Robson, who remained uncredited as a writer. Puzo retained screen credit in the completed film as a result of a quickly-settled lawsuit over story credit (most elements from his first draft made it into the final film), and Puzo's name subsequently featured heavily in the advertising. Puzo also wrote the original screenplay for Richard Donner's Superman, which then also included the plot for Superman II, as they were originally written as one film. He also collaborated on the stories for the 1982 film A Time to Die and the 1984 Francis Ford Coppola film The Cotton Club. In 1991, Puzo's speculative fiction The Fourth K was published. It centres on a fictional member of the Kennedy family dynasty who becomes President of the United States early in the 2000s. Puzo never saw the publication of his penultimate book, Omertà, but the manuscript was finished before his death, as was the manuscript for The Family. However, in a review originally published in the San Francisco Chronicle, Jules Siegel, who had worked closely with Puzo at Magazine Management Company, speculated that Omertà may have been completed by "some talentless hack". Siegel also acknowledged the temptation to "rationalize avoiding what is probably the correct analysis, that [Puzo] wrote it and it is terrible". Death Puzo died of heart failure on July 2, 1999, at his home in Bay Shore, New York, at the age of 78. In popular culture In April 2022, Paramount+ began streaming The Offer, a 10-episode dramatic mini-series telling a fictionalized story of the making of The Godfather, including Puzo's decision to write the first book in what came to be a series. Patrick Gallo plays Puzo. Victoria Kelleher plays his wife, Erika. Works Novels The Dark Arena (1955) The Fortunate Pilgrim (1965) The Runaway Summer of Davie Shaw (1966) Six Graves to Munich (1967), as Mario Cleri Fools Die (1978) The Fourth K (1990) The Last Don (1996) Omertà (2000) The Family (2001) (completed by Puzo's longtime girlfriend Carol Gino) Series The Godfather (1969) The Sicilian (1984) - takes place between the 6th and the 7th books of The Godfather Non-fiction "Test Yourself: Are You Heading for a Nervous Breakdown?" as Mario Cleri (1965) "The Six Million Killer Sharks That Terrorize Our Shores" as Mario Cleri (1966) "Choosing a Dream: Italians in Hell's Kitchen" (1971) The Godfather Papers and Other Confessions (1972) Inside Las Vegas (1977) Short stories All short stories, except "The Last Christmas" and "First Sundays", were written under the pseudonym Mario Cleri. "The Last Christmas" (1950) "John 'Red' Marston's Island of Delight" (1964) "Big Mike's Wild Young Sister-in-law" (1964) "Six Graves to Munich" (1965) “Saigon Nymph Who Led the Green Berets to th.... Discover the Mario Puzo popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Mario Puzo books.

Best Seller Mario Puzo Books of 2024

  • Six Graves to Munich synopsis, comments

    Six Graves to Munich

    Mario Puzo

    An explosive, nonstop thriller following one man’s trail of violence across postwar Europe from the bestselling author of The Godfather. Michael Rogan was an intelligence of...

  • The Godfather synopsis, comments

    The Godfather

    Mario Puzo, Francis Ford Coppola, Anthony Puzo & Robert J. Thompson

    50th ANNIVERSARY EDITIONWITH A NEW INTRODUCTION BY FRANCIS FORD COPPOLAMario Puzo’s classic saga of an American crime family that became a global phenomenonnominated as one of...

  • Wonderworks synopsis, comments

    Wonderworks

    Angus Fletcher

    This “fascinating” (Malcolm Gladwell, New York Times bestselling author of Outliers) examination of literary inventions through the ages, from ancient Mesopotamia to Elena Ferrante...

  • The Fourth K synopsis, comments

    The Fourth K

    Mario Puzo

    A PRESIDENTIAL DYNASTY. AN ARAB TERRORIST ATTACK. DEMOCRACY UNDER SIEGE. Mario Puzo envisioned it all in his eerily prescient 1991 novel, The Fourth K. President Francis Xavier K...

  • Leave the Gun, Take the Cannoli synopsis, comments

    Leave the Gun, Take the Cannoli

    Mark Seal

    This “wickedly pacey pageturner” (Total Film) unfurls the behindthescenes story of the making of The Godfather, fifty years after the classic film’s original release.The story of h...

  • Die ehrenwerte Familie synopsis, comments

    Die ehrenwerte Familie

    Peter Watson & Monika Hahn-Prölss

    Die blutigen Anfänge der amerikanischen Cosa Nostra: Der fesselnde MafiaRoman »Die ehrenwerte Familie« von Peter Watson jetzt als eBook bei dotbooks. Es war einmal in Amerika … Ne...

  • The Dark Arena synopsis, comments

    The Dark Arena

    Mario Puzo

    Mario Puzo won international acclaim for The Godfather and his other Mafia novels. But before creating those masterpieces, Puzo wrote his first acclaimed novel The Dark Arena–an as...

  • Wiseguy synopsis, comments

    Wiseguy

    Nicholas Pileggi

    Nicholas Pileggi’s vivid, unvarnished, journalistic chronicle of the life of Henry Hillthe workingclass Brooklyn kid who knew from age twelve that “to be a wiseguy was to own the w...

  • Secrets of a Webcam Girl synopsis, comments

    Secrets of a Webcam Girl

    Annabelle T. Baxter

    From video vixen to happy endingsone woman reveals all!   How far would you go to pay the bills? Secrets of a Webcam Girl is the true story of a woman's transition from busine...

  • No Laughing Matter synopsis, comments

    No Laughing Matter

    Joseph Heller

    An uproarious and frank memoir of illness and recovery, No Laughing Matter is a story of friendship and recuperation from the author of the classic Catch22.It all began one typical...

  • The Last Don synopsis, comments

    The Last Don

    Mario Puzo

    A masterful saga of the last great American Mafia family and its powerful reach into Hollywood and Las Vegas, from the author of The Godfather The Last Don is Domenico Clericuzio, ...

  • Hit Lit synopsis, comments

    Hit Lit

    James W. Hall

    DISCOVER THE SECRETS OF WHAT MAKES A MEGABESTSELLER IN THIS ENTERTAINING, REVELATORY GUIDE  What do Michael Corleone, Jack Ryan, and Scout Finch have in common? Creative writi...

  • The Godfather Notebook synopsis, comments

    The Godfather Notebook

    Francis Ford Coppola

    THE PUBLISHING SENSATION OF THE YEAR FOR EVERY FILM FAN The neverbeforepublished edition of Francis Ford Coppola’s notes and annotations on The Godfather novel by Mario P...

  • My Best Mistake synopsis, comments

    My Best Mistake

    Terry O'Reilly

    The host of CBC Radio’s Under the Influence, Terry O’Reilly, uncovers the surprising power of screwing upThe Incredible Hulk was originally supposed to be grey, but a printing glit...

  • The Wolfpack synopsis, comments

    The Wolfpack

    Peter Edwards & Luis Najera

    Joined by awardwinning Mexican journalist Luis Nájera, leading organizedcrime author Peter Edwards introduces a motley assortment of millennial bikers, gangsters and Mafia whose bl...

  • Hot Springs synopsis, comments

    Hot Springs

    Stephen Hunter

    The undisputed master of the tough thriller, New York Times bestselling author Stephen Hunter delivers an “exciting and intelligent” (The Wall Street Journal) masterpiece set in 19...

  • The Boss of Bosses synopsis, comments

    The Boss of Bosses

    Attilio Bolzoni, Giuseppe D'Avanzo & Shaun Whiteside

    This is the true story of Totò Riina, the Cosa Nostra boss who rose from nothing to become the most powerful man in Sicily. The picture emerges of a bloodthirsty, powerhungry monst...

  • The Sicilian synopsis, comments

    The Sicilian

    Mario Puzo

    After Mario Puzo wrote his internationally acclaimed The Godfather, he has often been imitated but never equaled. Puzo's classic novel, The Sicilian, stands as a cornerstone of his...

  • The Prince synopsis, comments

    The Prince

    Vito Bruschini

    Based on a true story, The Prince is a “complex, informed, and intelligent saga” (Kirkus Reviews) about the web of love, betrayal, and murder that forged the most powerful criminal...

  • Omerta synopsis, comments

    Omerta

    Mario Puzo

    “A splendid piece of crime fiction . . . a fitting cap to a tremendous career . . . Through it all, Puzo keeps the heat on and keeps the reader enthralled with his characters and h...

  • Haunted synopsis, comments

    Haunted

    Laura Thornton

    When Sasha comes across an old diary belonging to the late Lady Amelia Asher, the centuriesold manuscript transforms her life drastically. From the mundane and unappealing, Sasha f...

  • The Fortunate Pilgrim synopsis, comments

    The Fortunate Pilgrim

    Mario Puzo

    FROM BESTSELLING AUTHOR OF THE GODFATHER "A classic... The novel is lifted into literature by its highly charged language, its penetrating insights, and its mixture of tenderness ...

  • Gangsters vs. Nazis synopsis, comments

    Gangsters vs. Nazis

    Michael Benson

    The stunning true story of the rise of Nazism in America in the years leading to WWIIand the fearless Jewish gangsters and crime families who joined forces to fight back. With an i...

  • If Tomorrow Comes synopsis, comments

    If Tomorrow Comes

    Sidney Sheldon

    Lovely, idealistic Tracy Whitney is framed into a fifteen year sentence in an escapeproof penitentiary. With dazzling ingenuity she fights back to destroy the untouchable crime lor...