Description

Book Synopsis

8 August 1963; a railway track in Buckinghamshire. The moon shines clearly over Bruce Reynolds and sixteen other men robbing a train of its sacks of money. The Great Train Robbery has entered British folklore as one of the most audacious and extraordinary crimes of the twentieth century. The haul 2,631,684 - is, in todays money, a staggering 26 million.

Bruce Reynolds, the leader of the gang, was sentenced to 25 years in prison; even the Commissioner of the Met, Sir Robert Mark, thought that excessive. On its first publication in 1995 Bruce Reynolds autobiography was widely acclaimed and it is now regarded as a classic in the true crime genre. Now reissued with a new introduction and final chapter, the story is brought up to date to include the return of Ronnis Biggs to the UK, the deaths of Buster Edwards, Roy James and Taters Chatham and the continuing story of Reynolds life since his release from jail, as well as dozens of previously unseen photographs.



Trade Review
His story stands apart ... skilful enough to capture both the immediate excitement of crime and the dull price it so often extracts * The Times *
Far superior in style and narrative to the standard self-serving criminal memoir * Guardian *
Exceptional... elegantly written
Amazes and immorally amuses with his high-living, anti-establishment career * Daily Mail *

The Autobiography of a Thief

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    A Paperback by B Reynolds, Bruce Reynolds

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      Publisher: Ebury Publishing
      Publication Date: 2/7/2011 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780753539170, 978-0753539170
      ISBN10: 0753539179

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      8 August 1963; a railway track in Buckinghamshire. The moon shines clearly over Bruce Reynolds and sixteen other men robbing a train of its sacks of money. The Great Train Robbery has entered British folklore as one of the most audacious and extraordinary crimes of the twentieth century. The haul 2,631,684 - is, in todays money, a staggering 26 million.

      Bruce Reynolds, the leader of the gang, was sentenced to 25 years in prison; even the Commissioner of the Met, Sir Robert Mark, thought that excessive. On its first publication in 1995 Bruce Reynolds autobiography was widely acclaimed and it is now regarded as a classic in the true crime genre. Now reissued with a new introduction and final chapter, the story is brought up to date to include the return of Ronnis Biggs to the UK, the deaths of Buster Edwards, Roy James and Taters Chatham and the continuing story of Reynolds life since his release from jail, as well as dozens of previously unseen photographs.



      Trade Review
      His story stands apart ... skilful enough to capture both the immediate excitement of crime and the dull price it so often extracts * The Times *
      Far superior in style and narrative to the standard self-serving criminal memoir * Guardian *
      Exceptional... elegantly written
      Amazes and immorally amuses with his high-living, anti-establishment career * Daily Mail *

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