Bloodhouse
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4.6 • 12 Ratings
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Only now, with Darcy Dugan and his enemies 'turned to dust', is the extraordinary story of one of Australia's most colourful criminals safe to publish.
'Mike, a lot, sometimes rot, has been written about me. Please hold this, my real story, to edit and present to a new generation, after I and the crooks we've exposed have turned to dust.' Darcy DuganWritten in secret during his long years in jail and smuggled out to keep it safe from his enemies until now, Bloodhouse is Darcy Dugan's brutally honest and gripping story of his extraordinary life and times.During Dugan's criminal career, he pulled off countless hold-ups but it was his daring escapes that captured the public's imagination and earned him the monicker of 'Houdini of the prison system'.One of his many famous escapes occurred less than half an hour after arriving at Long Bay, another after sawing a hole in a moving prison tram, but even Dugan couldn't crack Grafton Jail, the infamous 'Bloodhouse', where he spent 11 torturous years.In all, Dugan spent 44 years in prison. His firsthand experience of brutality and corruption led him to become an outspoken campaigner for reform and the archenemy of Sydney's criminal underworld, corrupt police and an unjust prison system.threatened with execution if revelations in his book became public, Dugan asked Mike tatlow to suppress this story until both he and his enemies had turned to dust, and write the concluding chapters.the result is a must-read account of a true Australian original.
Customer Reviews
True to its word
I have to rate this book 5 stars it’s a must read and is an amazing book once you start you won’t put it down until finished this is up there with the best I have ever read I will be recommending this to everyone I know
Bloodhouse
Great read, right up there with 'intractables' by Bernie Matthews. Really highlights how brutal and unfair the system could be.
Bloodhouse
One of the best reads for some time. Thoroughly enjoyed reading about characters involved in front page news during my earlier years.
I was surprised how many friends had mixed up Darcy Dugan with Ryan, the guy who was hanged in a Victorian prison for shooting a prison warder. As I read this book, it was a relief to remember that Darcy died a free man as the bounce of the ball did not go his way for most of his life. Whilst he was far from an angel, he trusted the wrong people.
I found the book hard to put down and kept my interest right to the end, even the epilogue was full of interest and I was sorry when it came to the end.