Welcome to an after-dark world of new money, hedonism and excess. A world of luxurious nightclubs where racketeers, gamblers and glamorous women mixed with entrepreneurs, bunny girls, politicians and policemen.
Bandit Country is a gripping, atmospheric true-crime noir. It is the story of Britain’s 1960’s gambling boom, as the country emerged from years of hardship to embrace exotic night-life and entertainment, all supplied by the Mafia.
It is an emotional, visceral story of brothers: the Luvaglios, who dreamed of an empire founded among the hard industrial skylines and bridges of Newcastle, built on good times and bright lights – dreams that, for a moment, were lived in technicolour; and the Kray twins, who looked up to this new kingdom from London and saw a slice of action they wanted for themselves.
And above all, it is a story of betrayal, murder and a shocking miscarriage of justice, as empires crumble, friends turn on friends, and the good times come screeching to a halt. Sure to be loved by fans of
Peaky Blinders, this story – that inspired classic British gangster film
Get Carter – isn’t quite like anything you’ve read before. Turn the page and roll the dice. . .
About the author
Jamie Reid is the author of the non-fiction books
Doped, the true story of the 1960s racehorse doping gangs which won the 2013 William Hill Sports Book of the Year Award,
Blown and
Monsieur X – which was short listed for the 2018 Daily Telegraph Sports Biography of the year. He is also a journalist and has written for the
Guardian, the
Independent on Sunday,
Private Eye,
Money Observer and the
Financial Times colour supplement
How To Spend It, or
HTSI, for whom he wrote the ‘Smart Money’ column from 2006 to 2016.