Book essex boys: a terrifying expose of the british drugs scene - Compare Prices and buy the Book
Browse main categories
Thud! from Terry Pratchett
KoomValley? That was where the trolls ambushed the dwarfs, or the dwarfs ambushed the trolls. It was far away. It was a long time ago.

But if he doesn’t solve the murder of just one dwarf, Commander Sam Vimes of Ankh-Morpork City Watch is going to see it fought again, right outside his office.
With his beloved Watch crumbling around him and war-drums sounding, he must unravel every clue, outwit every assassin and brave any darkness to find the solution.And darkness is following him....

Compare book prices of Thud!
From the Inside Flap of the Audio Cassette edition



Title: Essex Boys: A Terrifying Expose of the British Drugs Scene
Author: Bernard O'Mahoney
ISBN: 1840182857
EAN: 9781840182859
New Ed. Edition
224 Pages
Publisher: Mainstream Publishing
Binding: Paperback
Publication date: 2000-04-03


shopcond.avail.pricedelivery coststotal
USED*£ 2.49starting at £2.40£ 4.89Buy now
Used Book Essex Boys: A Terrifying Expose of the British Drugs Scene bei Amazon Buy nowUSED£ 2.48£ 2.75£ 5.23Buy now
Book Essex Boys: A Terrifying Expose of the British Drugs Scene new from BooksellerNEW£ 2.97£ 2.75£ 5.72Buy now
bookfellas - Buy NowNEW£ 7.99free on orders over £ 5£ 7.99Buy now
Compman - Buy NowNEW£ 5.83free on orders over £ 5£ 8.33Buy now
AnotherBookshop - Buy NowNEW£ 6.39£ 2.35£ 8.74Buy now
Book Essex Boys: A Terrifying Expose of the British Drugs Scene on Amazon UK Buy nowNEW£ 5.99free on orders over £ 19£ 8.74Buy now
Blackwell - Buy NowNEW£ 7.99free on orders over £ 20£ 9.99Buy now
Tesco.com UK - Buy NowNEW£ 7.99£ 2.50£ 10.49Buy now

"Violence is a messy business". Bernard O'Mahoney's words don't do justice to the casual brutality that litters his side of the Rettendon murders story. And justice, as opposed to man-made law, is his pre-occupation throughout. Standing toe-to-toe with Tony Thompson's account, Bloggs 19, what drives O'Mahoney's uneasy narrative is the belief that the two men jailed for the murder of three Firm members are innocent. One would be tempted to say that hoodlums assassinating hoodlums is itself a form of natural justice, and that Mick Steele and Jack Whomes were hardly angels, but that panders to the vengeful amorality endemic in that world. O'Mahoney was head doorman at Raquels nightclub in Basildon, where the ecstasy tablet was procured which killed Leah Betts. The dead girl's father holds O'Mahoney primarily responsible for her death, as he was aware of the drug dealing in the club. The first edition of this book, called "So This Is Ecstasy?", was initially withdrawn after Paul Betts objected to the use of the now-famous image of Leah on a life-support machine. Leah is one of the "victims" to whom the book is dedicated, while O'Mahoney's coldly staring eyes now fix you from the cover.

From Brooklyn to Basildon, tales of aggression, loyalty, squabbles and double-dealing swagger fascinate "straight people", many of whom derive a voyeuristic, vicarious thrill. O'Mahoney's flat flow of anecdotes, in which much is left unsaid, builds towards Leah's death, and his own exit from Firm life, with a grim, despairing predictability, but it becomes increasingly difficult to separate the man from the self-glamorising existence of debt-collectors, doormen and gangsters, and the culture of blame and punishment it promotes. In one telling incident, David Arnell, the quietest of doormen, suddenly snaps and badly beats up a customer, illustrating how the atmosphere of violence proves the strongest narcotic of all. O'Mahoney is also the author of Soldier of the Queen, a superior account, detailing his time serving in Northern Ireland, and which fills in much of the personal detail lacking here. Without that, this book-of-the-film-of-the-book, despite its lurid fascination, ultimately punches below its weight. --David Vincent

A new edition of a book formerly known as "So This is Ecstacy?", this is the true story of the rise of one of the most violent and successful criminal gangs of the 90s. The author of the book was a key member of that gang, and this is his inside account of their violent ways. Their reign ended when the three leaders were murdered.

2008-02-25 poor

Poor book , well researched but thats all it is , research.
Not as in-depth as what the other "real" key members of the Essex boys have written. Not the best book on the subject imo. Best taken with a pinch of salt.


similar books

Muscle Muscle
Bonded by Blood: Murder and Intrigue in the Essex Ganglands Bonded by Blood: Murder and Intrigu...
Cocky: The Rise and Fall of Curtis Warren, Britain's Biggest Drugs Baron Cocky: The Rise and Fall of Curtis ...
Essex Boys, The New Generation Essex Boys, The New Generation
Wannabe in My Gang?: From the Krays to the Essex Boys Wannabe in My Gang?: From the Krays...
Powder Wars: The Supergrass Who Brought Down Britain's Biggest Drug Dealers Powder Wars: The Supergrass Who Bro...
Wild Thing: The True Story of Britain's Rightful Guv'nor Wild Thing: The True Story of Brita...
The Devil: Britain's Most Feared Underworld Taxman The Devil: Britain's Most Feared Un...

last viewed books

The Ghost Next Door: True Stories of Paranormal Encounters from Everyday People The Ghost Next Door: True Stories o...
MLB Philadelphia Phillies 2009 Boxed Calendar MLB Philadelphia Phillies 2009 Boxe...
The Larynx The Larynx
Dead Lucky: Life After Death on Mount Everest Dead Lucky: Life After Death on Mou...
Media Law and Human Rights Media Law and Human Rights
John Deere: Stonescaping Made Easy: Bring the Beauty of Stone to Your Home & Yard John Deere: Stonescaping Made Easy:...