The Liar's Playbook
A Memoir of Family and Crime
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
INSTANT NATIONAL BESTSELLER
The remarkable, true story of an unusual childhood, complete with gangsters, guns, diamonds, drug smuggling, and fraud—just like any other little girl’s life.
At twelve years old, Leslie Bradford-Scott watched police cars swarm her family’s suburban home in Ontario. Hours later, she, her mom, and her grandmother were fleeing across the border into Florida with no explanation and no questions allowed. In an instant, her idyllic childhood turned into a maelstrom of grift, guns, and tragedy.
Decades later, Leslie’s mother handed her a blue binder—her father’s secret prison manuscript dubbed the Liar’s Playbook. Inside was a confession to trafficking goods, running arms, and playing both sides between international intelligence and the mafia. For most of her life, Leslie believed her father was a drug dealer with delusions of grandeur. Instead, she discovered a shadow world of espionage, organized crime, and explosive family secrets, including her father’s claim that he smuggled jewels to fund CIA-backed operations for the Contras. Her investigation leads to Hamilton’s violent “Bomb City” era, where mobsters like the Musitanos settled scores with dynamite, and some of the blood trails lead straight to her family.
Part true-crime thriller, part intimate memoir, The Liar’s Playbook tracks a daughter’s search for truth through unreliable memories, corrupt intelligence agents, and the long echo of her father’s double life. As she pieces together what really happened, Leslie must ask the one question that still haunts her: Can you forgive someone whose actions nearly destroyed you?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Entrepreneur Bradford-Scott debuts with a stranger-than-fiction account of growing up in Ontario and Florida as the daughter of a career criminal. Though Bradford-Scott's father, Jean Claude Garofoli, was ostensibly a jeweler, the author learned of his criminality at age 12 in 1977, when she stepped off the school bus to find police cars on her lawn. Instead of explaining the scene, Bradford-Scott's mother bundled her into her grandmother's car and announced they'd be moving to Florida while her father handled some "business." In the late '80s, Garofoli went to prison on drug trafficking charges, and Bradford-Scott made peace with his legacy. Decades later, however, Bradford-Scott's mother presented her with a binder containing a manuscript her father had written behind bars. Reading it revealed that Garofoli's shady dealings went far deeper than she realized, and may have included helping the CIA fund the Contras in Nicaragua. Eventually, Bradford-Scott found closure by expressing her complicated feelings in letters she addressed to Garofoli after his death ("Your legacy isn't just in the challenges I've had to overcome; it's in the courage I've developed to keep moving forward"). Propulsive and emotionally nuanced, this satisfies.