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Villains: It Takes One to Know One... [Paperback]

Paul Ferris , Reg McKay
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
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Villains: It Takes One to Know One... + The Ferris Conspiracy + Vendetta: Turning Your Back on Crime Can Be Deadly...
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Product details

  • Paperback: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Black and White Publishing (30 July 2010)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1845022912
  • ISBN-13: 978-1845022914
  • Product Dimensions: 19.2 x 12.8 x 2.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 198,717 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Paul Ferris
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Product Description

Product Description

Murder, gunrunning, drug trafficking, kneecappings - Paul Ferris has been accused of many things in his life, some true, some not. What's not in dispute is that he spent twenty-five years as one of Britain's most feared gangsters. Out of prison and straight for five years, Paul still hasn't forgotten the common thugs and big-time players that surrounded him or the world of violence, fear and uneasy alliances that he inhabited with them. Now Paul Ferris recounts the stories of a tough existence that nobody knows better. The brutality you'd expect, the strangeness you might not. There's the man wanted by everyone from the Old Bailey to Glasgow High Court but who might just be a figment of the cops' imagination; the rise of women in the underworld, with unheard-of power and loaded pistols in thigh holsters; or the betrayed Manchester face who visited a gang's club and sprayed it with bullets, only to become the gang's hero overnight. The stories cover the underbellies of London, Liverpool, Glasgow, Manchester and beyond, but the material couldn't be closer to home - from the job Paul's father, Willie Ferris, pulled with a school bus full of kids as the getaway vehicle, to the war Paul got caught up in between two of London's biggest teams. And, as you'll discover, when it comes to villains, it takes one to know one.

About the Author

Reg McKay was a widely published investigative journalist and regular crime columnist for the Daily Record. He was the author of ten books, most bestsellers, including The Last Godfather and Vendetta (also with Paul Ferris). After his release from prison in 2002, Paul Ferris pledged to turn his back on crime and is now working on various media projects. Villains is his third book with Reg McKay.

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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Reg McKay is fast becoming the godfather of Scottish true crime books. It helps that he often has in tow Paul Ferris, once a notorious, feared Glasgow gangster. Ferris now seems to be on the straight and narrow, nearly six years after being released from prison for gunrunning (he claims he was only moving a box as a favour for a villain from whom he was picking up counterfeit banknote plates - for 'one last big one', as the criminal cliché has it).

McKay and Ferris's latest volume (following last year's Vendetta which shifted plenty of copies) is called Villains (and wryly tagged 'It takes one to know one'). Though the narration is given in the first person voice of Ferris, McKay's style is unmistakeable, and it makes you curious as to how they collaborate. Villains is a lucky bag of tales of lowlife wretches, bent cops, con merchants and, as Ferris calls them, 'men of honour'. Some stories are offcuts from the Arthur Thompson saga, some are vitriolic accounts of those who have crossed Ferris, others are retellings of violence, derring do and audacious cons, from criminal raconteurs of Ferris's acquaintance.

Paul Ferris is hard to get to grips with - for a start he looks more like an affable football manager than a career hard man - and in The Last Godfather (McKay's book on the Thompson dynasty of Glasgow gangsters), he came over as something of a hero. That Ferris, as a small and bullied teenager, found the courage for revenge seems undisputed, tracking down his tormentors (mostly from the feared Welsh family, sworn enemies of the Thompsons) one by one and leaving one of them with his scalp hanging off. He soon had a reputation. After several years as one of Thompson's lieutenants (alongside Tam Bagan), Ferris was wanted for a high number of serious crimes, many of them carried out against other villains.

Vendetta caused a bit of a stir, not least in accusations of the involvement of various authorities and individuals in the wrongdoings of Paul Bennett, a Liverpool gangster who Ferris evidently thinks has got off lightly for his many crimes. Even Deadly Divisions, a novel written by the McKay / Ferris pairing caused ructions apparently - Ferris claims the police dug up graves in Glasgow's Necropolis cemetery, convinced that a scene in the book must have a basis in truth.

The revelations in Villains are not so shocking and indeed, MI5 are unlikely to be interested in Ferris's outing of Glasgow hard man Jaimba McLean as a secret bingo player. But the yarns are good. The most intriguing sections are those dealing with villainous exploits outside of Scotland - including the latter drugged-up days of Rab Carruthers, a Glasgow street player who later transferred himself, and his power, south to Manchester.

In the early 90s, before his last, lengthy jail sentence, Ferris spent time with him there, and also in London, where he and McLean, after an almighty pub brawl, almost set off a war between the Arif and the Adams families, still two of the most potent criminal families in England. The chapter on the Adams family struck me as the most revealing - with McKay's help, Ferris can come across as a likeable rogue, a campaigner for the 'honest criminal', who plays by the rules of the street, over the ruthless thugs and junkies who care nothing for innocents in the way. But I don't buy his portrayal of the Adamses as a misunderstood bunch who have been demonised by the media.

These days, Ferris is sticking to the business of making legitimate money out of our eternal interest in the illegitimate, with plans for documentaries on villains, including the life of TC Campbell, the former robber who was jailed for the so-called Ice Cream Wars arson murders. There are plans for a film about Ferris, with Robert Carlyle up for the lead (a chapter of the book charts Ferris's dealings with the brother of rock star Jim Kerr, who initiated the film, but is no longer on Ferris's Christmas card list, shall we say). Villains is another success for this writing team and I recommend it to fellow readers who lap up these racy, psychology-free, true crime confessions.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
great book 29 Dec 2006
By ..
Format:Paperback
I bought this book for my boyfriend for Christmas. He read the book and really enjoyed it. I read a few of the chapters and thought it was a really good read with lots of interesting stories. If you are interested in gangster books then this is the book for you.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
By Bilko
Format:Paperback
Having already read and enjoyed the previous two efforts by Reg McKay and Paul Ferris The Ferris Conspiracy and Vendetta. I knew i wouldn't be disappointed by this recent book Villains - It takes one to know one, and i wasn't.

Villains takes the reader for a stroll down memory lane with Paul Ferris as he recounts incidents in his life and tells the story of some of the 'interesting' individuals he met while leading a life of crime as a notorious Glasgow gangster.

Some of the characters are evil individuals like the monster 'Hammy' a truly repulsive creature with a lust for young boys. Others are capable and once feared gangsters such as Rab Carruthers a ruthless Glasgow born drug dealer who ran a crime empire in Manchester. I found the book to be compulsive reading....I just could not put it down.

Once again Reg McKay and Paul Ferris have delivered the goods. I cannot wait for their next instalment!
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