John H. Davis (author)
John Hagy Davis was an American author who wrote several books on the Bouvier and Kennedy families and on the Mafia, both the Sicilian Mafia and its Italian-American offshoot.
Biography
Davis was the son of stockbroker John Ethelbert Davis and Maude Reppelin Bouvier, younger sister of John Vernou Bouvier III and, therefore, first cousin of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and Lee Radziwill. His mother and John V. Bouvier III were both children of prominent New York lawyer John Vernou Bouvier Jr.Davis was a 1951 graduate of Princeton University as well as Columbia University. While serving in the United States Navy during the 1950s he was an officer with the Sixth Fleet stationed in Naples, Italy. Davis said that he was required to "deal with the Mafia hoods who controlled the ports" as part of his duties as shore patrol and legal officer. He stated that during his time there he became interested in the history of Italy and studied the history of the Mafia. After the Navy, Davis studied at the Italian Institute for Historical Studies in Naples, and directed a cultural center in southern Italy.
Author
Davis is the author of several books about American families such as the Bouviers, the Guggenheims and the Kennedys.''Mafia Kingfish''
In 1989, the New American Library published Mafia Kingfish: Carlos Marcello and the Assassination of John F. Kennedy, in which Davis implicated the Mafia and Carlos Marcello in the assassination of John F. Kennedy. According to Davis, Lee Harvey Oswald and Jack Ruby had "strong ties" to Marcello, and that an Oswald imposter visited the Russian embassies in Cuba and Mexico.Publishers Weekly called it an "engrossing, startlingly detailed biography of a Mafia don". Kirkus Reviews said "the centerpiece of is a plausible, even persuasive, case for the proposition that the Gulf Coast godfather masterminded the assassination of JFK." A reviewer for The Pittsburgh Press wrote: "'Mafia Kingfish' is such a page-turner, it could be a fictional thriller. But it's an amazing bit of contemporary history begging for someone to solve its mystery."