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Book Description trade paperback. No Jacket. Illustrated with black and white photographs. 99 pages VG. Light shelf and edge wear to covers, signed by the author on the flyleaf, overall very good condition. Signed by author. Seller Inventory # 12727
Book Description Softcover. Condition: Good. Dust Jacket Condition: No Dust Jacket. Photographic (illustrator). First Edition. Signed by Author. 300 g; 104 pages, last four pages blank, includes appendix of resources And, Personalities Involved in the Case, which excludes Ronald Ryan! Inscribed by the author on the title page. Illustrated throughout with black-and-white photographs and some facsimiles of newspapers articles. Barry Dickins, the author of the award-winning play Remember Ronald Ryan, powerfully evokes Ryan the man, the drama of his story and the historical background to the execution, with a rich collection of anecdote and ephemera: recollections by people connect with Ryan's escape, arrest, detention and appeal, as well as supporters and opponents of capital punishment. -- from the rear panel. Size: 4to 9¾" - 12" tall. The author has signed the book on the title page. Please refer to accompanying picture (s). Illustrator: Photographic. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: History; Sociology; Local History -- Victoria; Legal; Signed by Author. ISBN: 0868194247. ISBN/EAN: 9780868194240. Inventory No: 0218188. Seller Inventory # 0218188
Book Description Soft Cover. Condition: Near Fine. First Edition. 100pp, notes, appendices, bw ills. Or card covers. Near new. The story of the hanging of Ronald Ryan, the last man to be hanged in Australia. Size: Small 4to. Seller Inventory # 035260
Book Description Paperback. Condition: Good. Some scratches and faded marks to the cover. Light wear to the edges. The content is clean and readable throughout, a decent enough copy. Seller Inventory # 031688-2
Book Description Softcover / Paperback. Condition: Fine. First edition. Softcover. On Friday, February 3 1967, in Melbourne, the temperature was 83 degrees Fahrenheit at 8am, rising to a top of 98 degrees at two that afternoon. That same day at 8am Ronald Joseph Ryan was hanged at Pentridge Prison. The night before the execution a force of 250 police, many of them with alsation dogs, was on duty to control a tense but passive crowd of about 800 outside Pentridge. Following the hanging about 100,000 workers throughout Victoria stopped work for two minutes of silence - work on the Melbourne waterfront came to a standstill. The execution had become a last-ditch battle between the old-style Premier, Sir Henry Bolte, and Australia's intelligentsia. The Premier won. But the hanging hardened public opinion against capital punishment and Ryan was the last felon to die at the hands of the State. His death was a punctuation mark in Australian history: a time when Australians confronted by the chilly impact of their own brutality, finally unburdened themselves of that convict inheritance and the gloom of the gallows. The author evokes Ryan the man, the drama of his story and the historical background to the execution, with a collection of anecdote and ephemera: recollections by people connected with Ryan's escape, arrest, detention and appeal, as well as supporters and opponents of capital punishment. Illus. with many photos and press cuttings from the time. With Appendices and Notes. 100pp. 8vo. softcover. From the library of true crime writer, Wilfred Gregg, with his personal b/plate. F. with no creasing to covers. Seller Inventory # 18060
Book Description Condition: Fine. First Edition. Glossy card cover, 100 pages. (SIGNED AND INSCRIBED by the author on title page, 15 04 1998.) This copy appears unread. Seller Inventory # 041707