During the 1980s, Edward J. MacKenzie, Jr.—“Eddie Mac”—was caught up in the dangerous world of Boston’s underworld, working closely with the infamous Winter Hill Gang and the infamous James Whitey Bulger. Yet his story, told in his book entitled Street Soldier, is far more than just an inside look at organized crime. It is a powerful testimony of survival, resilience, and the search for belonging.
What makes Eddie’s account so compelling is not just the names and events—though readers do gain a rare firsthand perspective of Whitey Bulger, Stephen “The Rifleman” Flemmi, and even corrupt FBI agent John Connolly—but also the human story behind the headlines.
At its heart, Street Soldier is about a man’s quest for family, acceptance, loyalty, and love. Abandoned by his parents at age four, Eddie endured great hardship, including the trauma of foster care, yet he never stopped searching for connection and purpose. His journey is one of contradictions, but also of growth: a street enforcer who was also a Golden Gloves champion; a man struggling with personal demons who still fought to be a father; a tenth-grade dropout who, against all odds, later earned a college degree in just three years.
Eddie’s story is ultimately about transformation. Though shaped by violence and loyalty to a code that demanded much from him, he also showed courage in charting his own path—helping to take down a massive drug operation and proving that change is possible. His life reminds us that even in the harshest environments, the human spirit can endure, adapt, and rise above.