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Last Words

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On 3 February 1967, despite public outrage and vocal protests from wide-ranging community groups, Ronald Ryan became the last person to be legally executed in Australia. Last Words is the human story behind this historical event that aims to answer some of the remaining unanswered questions, fifty year after his death.

Ryan was found guilty of murdering prison officer George Hodson during an escape from Pentridge Prison with fellow inmate Peter Walker. But did Ryan really fire the bullet? Was Ryan executed to bolster Victorian Premier Henry Bolte’s chances of winning the upcoming Victorian election, during which he ran a campaign promoting his law-and-order agenda?

Through mesmerising prose, Barry Dickens takes readers into the last weeks of Ryan’s life and brings to life this infamous man whose personal story has gone undocumented until now.

Barry Dickins wrote the stage play Remember Ronald Ryan for the Playbox Theatre Company, which won the Louis Esson Prize for Drama at the Victorian Premier’s Awards in 1995 as well as the Amnesty Prize For Peace Through Art in the same year.

Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 2017

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Barry Dickins

35 books7 followers

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Calzean.
2,770 reviews1 follower
February 15, 2017
The book is not so much about the revelation of whether Ronald Ryan shot and killed the prison guard George Hodson during a prison break. The author makes it clear he believes Hodson was unfortunately shot by other prison guards who were shooting at Ryan and his fellow escapee Peter Walker. The author is of the clear opinion that Ryan was hung in order to help the State Bolte Goverment get reelected on a platform of law and order. In fact, there are little facts or analysis applied to answer the "unanswered questions".
Rather the book mainly covers how the author perceives what feelings, emotions and actions were taken by or to the people most impacted - Ryan, Ryan's wife and daughters, Ryan's solicitor and Ryan's mother. The key political players are almost invisible.
Dickins writes with great emotion, at times with anger, at the verdict and sentence. His writing is very powerful, raw and makes a lasting impression of people's indifference, the power of the state and the bleak, brutal world of Pentridge.
Profile Image for Sean Kennedy.
Author 44 books1,015 followers
March 27, 2017
This is a bit of a strange one - part biography, part historical fiction. But the injustice of what happened to Ronald Ryan is a blight upon Victoria's past, as he was sacrificed to make sure a politician won another election. I guess things never change.
8 reviews1 follower
March 30, 2017
This is a wonderful book. It doesn't pretend to be written impartially. The author is clear about his own strongly anti capital punishment opinions from start. Here is a lyrical and emotional look at what someone condemned to death might go through in waiting for the end and the effect of that on them and their loved ones. Also it's a look at the sort of society that calls for capital punishment, those that call for mercy and how some people who seek to inhabit the corridors of power will seek to exploit a populist current for their own political longevity.
Barry Dickins writes with an Australian vernacular all too rare in today's literature. Worth the read for his turn of phrase alone. Excellent.
Profile Image for Saturday's Child.
1,494 reviews
June 26, 2019
When Ronald Ryan was legally executed in Victoria in 1967 it caused public outrage. Even today it still divides opinions about his guilt and the law and order of the State Government of the time. This book revisits the event and the author shares his opinion that Ronald Ryan did not commit a murder.
35 reviews
December 20, 2023
Well written, but Barry Dickins seemed unsure if he was writing a history, or a historical novel based upon true events.
I would have hoped for some sort of reference list to back up his facts, as what he has written is heavily biased, but in no way attempts to treat the "unanswered questions", or even ask them.
260 reviews2 followers
February 4, 2017
Hugely disappointing. This book is about the last legally sanctioned hanging in Australia - on 3 February 1967 - and purports to reveal 'Unanswered Questions, 50 years on'. The only unanswered question for me is why I persisted for the entire 184 pages? Expecting historical, all you pretty much get is hysterical. I have no problem with objections to capital punishment - a problem we no longer have in Australia - but when the author wants to rant about the piousness of the bloke in the street, it's nothing but hypocrisy in his less than deft hand. Perhaps the book is best reviewed by Louis Nowra in The Australian (4 February 2017) "At times I felt as if I were being buttonholed by a man driven crazy by the case, allowing no facts to spoil his monologue".
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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