Download 8 Novels by John Silvester & Andrew Rule (.ePUB)

8 Novels by John Silvester & Andrew Rule (Underbelly #2)
Requirements: ePUB reader, 52.6MB
Overview: John Silvester is a senior crime reporter for The Age. Andrew Rule is a deputy editor of The Age. They are award-winning journalists and their work has been adapted for television as the top-rating Underbelly series on Australian TV Channel 9.

Available in ebook for the first time.

You’ve seen the television series and read the stories in the papers. Now return to the books that started documenting Australia’s underbelly. With their trademark forensic skills, respected journalists John Silvester and Andrew Rule bring to life stories of gang wars and crooked cops, of crimes in high places and suffering in low, of murder, courtroom drama and political machinations, of drug lords and hitmen in crash-through-or-crash grabs for power and territory.

Genre: Non-Fiction, Crime, Australia

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Books in the series:

Underbelly 2
He got the job. Then he got the bullet. Ron Williams said he’d die for a good job. He didn’t mean it literally. Vietnam veteran and armed robber Alex MacDonald needed a new identity, and he’d kill for it. One man ended in a shallow grave – the other in a prison cell. Civilised society rarely glimpses the dark side of humanity.

Underbelly 3
They couldn’t shoot holes in Fred’s story. So they shot holes in Fred instead.John Desmond Fred Gordon was the star prosecution witness in Operation T-Bone. He rejected police pleas to go into witness protection, punting that he could live longer on the street than in a safe house. He lost the bet. Every day criminals and police make life and death decisions that affect us all.

Underbelly 4
He took the contract.It was to die for.The international executioner flew from California to kill a man he’d never met. Police had the evidence but he never returned to Australia to stand trial – and save his own life. Instead, he faced a death penalty in Vietnam rather than testify against those who hired him because he knew they would kill his family in revenge. He who lived by the sword, died by it.

Underbelly 5
She had the will. He had the way. The old lady just wanted to enjoy her last few years. The adopted son wanted to inherit her savings. He persuaded his own son to bash her to death. He got the lot and bought a yacht to sail the Pacific. His son got fifteen years jail. Money has no morality. Greed has no guilt.

Underbelly 6
Lorraine Moss loved to cook. Her meatloaf was to die for. No one knew what made Johnny Moss sick. The tough slaughterman was sentenced to a wheelchair, then his deathbed, as his body failed him. His wife stood by him as he wasted away. It took 18 years to prove she’d slowly poisoned him. Ordinary people are capable of extraordinary evil…

Underbelly 11
First he got lucky. Then he got life. They called Carl Williams The Truth but the truth was he was a fat kid with a pill press and a taste for fast food, fast women and fast bucks. He got lucky the day Jason Moran shot him in the guts instead of the head. Carl didn’t return the favour: his paid hitmen slaughtered the Moran crew one by one. But his luck ran out. Now he’s serving life. And that’s the truth.

The Gangland War
First he got lucky. Then he got life. They called Carl Williams ‘The Truth’ but the truth was he was just a fat kid with a pill press and a taste for fast food, fast women and fast bucks. He got lucky the day Jason Moran shot him in the belly instead of the head. Carl didn’t return the favour: one by one, Moran and his brother and father and their mates were shot dead during an underworld war that was really an extermination program.

But Carl’s luck ran out when the Purana Taskforce came calling. He was sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum of 35 years. And that’s the truth.

Underbelly: A Tale of Two Cities
The makers of Underbelly turn to an era when Sydney rivalled Melbourne as the crime capital of the Pacific. Sydney was Sin City, a town on the take for people on the make. From King’s Cross to the sport of kings, from back street brothels to plush private casinos, high rollers rubbed shoulders with low life.

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