![]() His father worked for the railroad and abandoned the family when Mario was 12. The Mafia tale had its roots in rough Hell’s Kitchen, where Puzo was raised by Italian immigrants. The result was “ The Godfather,” published 50 years ago next week, and a book that, as he promised his children, did indeed become a best-seller - and then some. Or at least enough money to pay off his mounting debts. He put his highbrow literary aspirations aside and set out to pen a big, honking, commercial book that would bring him fame and fortune. His previous two novels were well-reviewed but had sold about enough copies to fill a modest station wagon. Their father’s claim was so laughable because, at that point, Puzo was a long way from the best-seller list. ![]() The kids rolled their eyes and snickered. “He’d say, ‘Keep it down, I’m writing a best-seller,'” Puzo’s eldest child, Tony, tells The Post. ![]() The basement also held a pool table, and while Puzo typed away, his five children would come down and play loud games, forcing Puzo to admonish the brood. The broom-closet-like space beneath his Long Island house had enough room for a desk, a typewriter and little more. In the late 1960s, Mario Puzo retreated to the basement nook that served as his office to work on a new book. Meet the sausage 'queen' of NYC's San Gennaro Feast Loose lips lead to lawsuits over allegations from 'The Godfather' set 'Godfather' director Francis Ford Coppola's island lists for $2.2M Al Pacino on Marlon Brando’s 'Godfather' Oscar win: ‘Clear the air’
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