In a foreword written by W.R. Burnett, published in a 1960's paperback edition of the original 1929 novel, Burnett describes his experiences as a Chicago newspaperman, and how the inspiration to write a realistic gangster story came to him. There were gang killings and shootouts virtually every few days, this being the height of the Prohibition booze wars. Burnett tells how he met a small time racketeer, whose attitudes toward the gangster life became the basis of Burnett's fictional character.
Burnett describes how at one point, he feared that the character was gaining a life of his own, and threatening to become a larger than life monster, who would end up glamorizing gangsters. Then it occurred to him that the vain, delusional Rico was actually nothing more than a little Napoleon, a little Caesar. Burnett decided it would make the perfect title for his book, and the movie version came out a year or two later.
And when he crossed the bridge, the phantoms came to meet him
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