I bought this book in expectation that it might tell me something about Billy Wright the man - what motivated him, what specific involvement he had in UVF and LVF killings, what he was like as a person. (For example, something similar to the excellent account of Johnny Adair given in the recent book by Lister and Jordan. If they can give such insightful detail about someone who is still alive, how come Anderson gives us so little on the deceased Wright?) In fact, this book is much more about the death of Wright in HMP Maze and the apparent collusion of the prison authorities therein, than a rounded account of Wright's life and terrorist career. It's not well written - Anderson writes more like a small-town journalist used to covering petty sessions and village fetes and isn't someone who has a good story-telling style - and it basically serves up a litany of UVF and LVF crimes with little or no information on Wright's highly probable involvement in them, plus some direct quotes from a tape recording of Wright, padded out with a vast polemic on his death. I also strongly object to Anderson's style, in which he tries to hard to report things objectively, for example by saying repeatedly that Wright was never convicted of X, or that there was no evidence to link him with Y. That's all very well if the account concerns someone genuinely innocent, but I hardly think that there's anyone on the planet (barring ultra loyalists of unsound mind) who thinks that Wright was anything other than a bigoted, murdering thug. That said, he didn't deserve state execution - but the book-buying public don't deserve such a poorly-written, superficial account as the one that Anderson has written. Avoid.