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Operation Bourbon: The First Chapter Paperback – October 19, 2013
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"Then he said the words that we’d all been dreading to hear, We’ve got a rat."
Targeting the Rebels MC, at a staggering twenty-four years total length, Operation Bourbon was the longest running police undercover and infiltration mission ever conducted in the UK.
Now for the first time the story of the operation can be told based on Iain Parke’s extensive conversations with the officer involved, together with extracts from police files and surveillance materials, as well as never before seen interviews with club members and associates, and sections of club documentation showing how the club was set up and run.
The result is an astonishing tale of fundamental betrayals at every level, as both bikers and police are forced to ask themselves who they can really trust.
As a result, Operation Bourbon opens the books both on club business, and on police undercover operations, in a way never before seen in the UK.
Operation Bourbon is the fourth of Iain Parke’s book set in the dangerous and hard charging world of British outlaw bikers, and the first to investigate the actions and impact of an undercover cop as he begins to worm his way into this close and tight knit brotherhood.
- Print length284 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateOctober 19, 2013
- Dimensions6 x 0.64 x 9 inches
- ISBN-100956161588
- ISBN-13978-0956161581
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Product details
- Publisher : Bad Press Co uk (October 19, 2013)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 284 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0956161588
- ISBN-13 : 978-0956161581
- Item Weight : 1.08 pounds
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.64 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #5,730,184 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #17,543 in Hard-Boiled Mystery
- Customer Reviews:
About the author
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I import industrial quantities of Class A drugs, kill people and lie (a lot) for a living, being a British based crime fiction writer.
I became obsessed with motorcycles at an early age, taking a six hundred mile cross-country tour to Cornwall as soon as I bought a moped at the tender age of sixteen and after working as a London dispatch rider, I built my first chopper in my bedroom at university, undeterred by the fact that my workshop was upstairs.
Armed with a MBA degree, I worked in insolvency and business restructuring in the UK and Africa which inspired my first novel The Liquidator a conspiracy thriller set in East Africa. Whatever you do, don't take it on holiday as your safari reading!
This was then followed by my 'Biker Noir' novel Heavy Duty People, set amongst UK outlaw bikers in the North East and Borders; which turned into a trilogy with Heavy Duty Attitude and Heavy Duty Trouble after two of the characters unexpectedly met up again in my head and demanded I write it.
I have now found that biker books are a bit like zombies, whenever I think I have them dead and buried, they just keep lurching back to life, only dirtier, bloodier and more violent than before as a further three books, Operation Bourbon, Lord of the Isles and DILLIGAF have followed.
Today I live off the grid, high up on the North Pennines in Northumberland with my wife, dogs, and a garage full of motorcycle restoration projects and I'm working on a number of book projects.
Author interview
Q When and why did you start on the path to become an author?
New Year's Day 1994, recovering from a mammoth hangover at a friend's hut in a village half way up Kilimanjaro by reading Iain Bank's Complicity at one sitting and thinking, so how do you start creating a plot like that? It's been downhill, literally, from there.
Q Who are your two most favourite authors? And why?
The two that really inspired me to pick up a pen and have a go. Iain Banks for his plots as above, and John LeCarré for the way he develops an absorbing atmosphere and ambience in the Smiley series. That he went on to write The Constant Gardener, one of the best ever Kenyan books was just fantastic.
Q Do you read books that are the same genre as your work?
I'm best known for my biker books series.
I'd read Hells Angels Hunter S Thompson's seminal work as a teenager which fascinated me and I'd then read anything else I could find on outlaw bikers and bike gangs and the idea of writing something that took the culture seriously had been on my mind for years before I picked up a pen, back in those days before Sons of Anarchy splashed SAMCRO across the world's screens.
After Sonny Barger published his autobiography there seems to have been an increasing flow of outlaw motorcycle club based books and so I read a lot of factual, very much 'so called' in some cases, books about biker culture particularly but I tend not to read much biker fiction as given my magpie mind I'd just end up stealing bits that I wanted to use in my own books.
I also read a lot of true crime and books on British gangland by way of research and for The Liquidator, my first book I also read a lot around the Rwandan genocide as well as East African histories covering Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, Zanzibar.
Q Who do you write for? The audience or yourself?
Being honest, myself in the first instance as my books are things I just need to get out. But then the pleasure of messing with reader's minds I suppose is also quite a selfish one.
Q Are you totally separated from your characters or is there a bit of you inside?
There's a core or nugget of autobiography in all my books to a greater or sometimes much lesser extent. There has to be for me to be able to write myself into the characters and understand the logic of the choices they make.
Q What's your technique? Plan it out or make it up as you go?
A mix. I tend I have a theme or an idea, which becomes a bit of an outline that becomes a stronger skeleton as I go, but the characters always have a way of revealing hidden twists and motivations as they get involved.
For example there was never actually meant to be a Brethren outlaw motorcycle club crime thriller series. The first book, Heavy Duty People, was a standalone exploring how and why a character might end up as what they were and what might be involved in becoming a gangster.
The second book, Heavy Duty Attitude, just happened when two of the characters met up in my head about 1 months later and then they were off, I was just along for the ride, and it's gone on from there.
Q Tell us a secret...what's your guilty pleasure?
I murdered my ex-boss - I had him garrotted in one of my books. That was very satisfying.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 4, 2014I really like the brethren trilogy and was hoping for something as good.Unfortunately Iain dropped the ball with this one, not his best effort and the book felt rushed as if he had to,put something out.
To steal a line from the book "C'mon son is that all you got"
Better luck with the next one.
I'm giving it 3 stars as I really enjoy his writing overall.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 23, 2015Good luck reading didn't know what club here was writing about till two or three chapters in no rhythm to it
Top reviews from other countries
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Dr. HookReviewed in Germany on September 5, 2015
1.0 out of 5 stars Achtung: kein "true crime" sondern "fiction"
... der Inhalt des Buches wird auf der Rückseite so beschrieben, als ob die "Operation Bourbon" gegen einen Motorrad Club namens "The Rebels" in England tatsächlich stattgefunden hat. Der Club sowie Operation sind jedoch reine Fiktion. Im Buch werden "Abhörprotokolle" der Polizei mit geschwärzten Namen (völlig bescheuert...) aufgeführt. Wer braucht denn sowas.... Der Autor des Buches ist angeblich spurlos verschwunden bevor das Buch veröffentlicht wurde (laut Vorwort des Velegers). Komplette Phantasie-Parallelwelt. Rausgeschmissenes Geld.
Habe über Amazon.de bestellt und es sofort zurückgeschickt.
- StuartRWilsonReviewed in the United Kingdom on October 28, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Enjoy this shot of Bourbon
Who is Iain Parke? Do you know? Does he know? Does he even exist? Mystery surrounds Iain Parke just as much as it surrounds his novels which have become a sensation in the past few years.
His foray into the murky world of bikers in the UK has seen him become a cult figure in a traditionally close knit and misunderstood community. The Brethren Trilogy was intelligent, original and captivating as each novel unravelled and blurred the lines between fantasy and reality. Parke himself became one of the main characters in the books in a fascinating series of novels that gripped the reader from first page to last.
Parke always finishes his books with a disclaimer about his novels being fiction but even after reading them I am not so sure. You become so engrossed in what he has written that the final disclaimer still feels like part of the novel; another path he is leading you down to confuse you, to throw you off the scent.
It was with that background that I gulped down his latest offering - Operation Bourbon. The book is presented as a jigsaw of transcripts, police evidence, news stories and previously unpublished material from the original trilogy that the Publishers have put together. While the original novels focussed almost entirely on the biker world in England this one is firmly focussed on the same world north of the border. It follows the incredible undercover journey of a police officer who spends years infiltrating an MC and his trials and tribulations as he becomes part of that world.
The enigmatic way the novel is pieced together captivates throughout. The beauty of Parke's style is that nobody in these novels is a hero but we are drawn into their lives and we have a fascination for who they are and how they live. More so than the Brethren Trilogy, Operation Bourbon describes in great detail how the world of the MC works, how you get into it and what it means to be in it. It is a form of anti-society but rather than being pure fantasy it is, of course, based entirely on fact.
Parke's description of this world is amongst the best I have ever read - and that includes myriad true biker story books that exist out there. He treats his subject with respect but not reverence and that is key.
Operation Bourbon is a must read not just for anybody who has interest in the biking world but for anybody who likes to read a well structured, well thought out story with real characters and descriptive excellence.
It forces you to re-read paragraphs to be sure you have taken in what was written, it makes you question what you are reading and most of all it messes with your head. But that is exactly what Parke wants - if he even exists.
I enjoyed my first shot of Bourbon. I expect, I hope and I crave more shots to follow. Take a bow Iain Parke, whoever you are.
- Andy OWReviewed in the United Kingdom on October 22, 2017
4.0 out of 5 stars Not bad
Loved the heavy duty trilogy and this builds upon the world created within these books. It's a good book but not a patch on the previous 3. Looking forward to the next now!
- Paul GreenReviewed in the United Kingdom on November 3, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Another great
Read the first three biker books and had the author on my radio show.
Told him then there was more of this style needed,glad he agreed.
Up to the usual high standard,either has a inside track to outlaw biker life or more likely just does his research,unlike many other authors who try to write this style of book.
Loved the way he used several differing sources to tell the story,i wont spoil it by telling you more.
Best you go buy the book and the other in this series,you wont regret you did.
- JamesReviewed in the United Kingdom on December 2, 2013
3.0 out of 5 stars sorry iain
just no where as good as his previous books on bike clubs, would recommend all 3 of them, this book could and should have been so much better, come on iain, you have proved you can write a cracking story, give us another book we can get stuck into and enjoy