A crime novel in which Billy Cracken's decision to escape from prison brings trouble in the form of the police and the private army of an inmate, who now has no chance of escaping thanks to Billy. From the author of JACK'S RETURN HOME (which was later filmed as 'Get Carter').
Ted Lewis (1940 – 1982) was a British writer born in Manchester, an only child. After World War II the family moved to Barton-upon-Humber in 1947. He had a strict upbringing and his parents did not want their son to go to art school, but Ted's English teacher Henry Treece, recognising his creative talents in writing and art, persuaded them not to stand in his way.
Lewis attended Hull Art School for four years. His first work was in London, in advertising, and then as an animation specialist in television and films (among them the Beatles' Yellow Submarine). His first novel, All the Way Home and All the Night Through was published in 1965, followed by Jack's Return Home, subsequently retitled Get Carter after the success of the film of the same name starring Michael Caine, which created the noir school of British crime writing and pushed Lewis into the best-seller list. After the collapse of his marriage Lewis returned to his home town in the 1970s.
Ted Lewis died in 1982 having published seven more novels and written several episodes for the television series Z-Cars.
Lewis turns his attention to prison lags, creating an atmospheric portrait of Billy Cracken, and his attempts to escape the life he has created for himself
Lewis excels at gritty British crime writing and this is another fantastic book. The book starts with the relatively humdrum prison life but, the tension builds up from there on in: the "on the run" middle section of the book is genuinely gripping. Some wonderful phrases and dialogue as you'd expect from Lewis.
If you want to get a sense of what British prisons were like in the 60s and 70s (brutal, desperate, medieval), this is an illuminating read. Not as good as GBH or Get Carter, however, I didn’t think.
This is the fourth Ted Lewis novel I've read, with the Jack Carter trilogy comprising the other three. Billy Rags, while not as good as the first two Carter books, is better than "Mafia Pigeon," and a good read, even if it sometimes seems like a slightly unrefined work.
The title character is a truly hard man - a criminal in 1970s England who is as tough as they come. The story is portioned in an unusual way. The first half is like a rougher, realer predecessor to the Shawshank Redemption; Billy is in jail doing a 25-year stretch, and he thinks of little more than escape. Following his interactions with the other cons is often really engaging, and even humorous at times. The latter half covers Billy's escape attempt and what follows. While there are some slower moments which seem overly heavy on details, there is plenty of palpable suspense to carry a reader through.
Billy as a character is an interesting one. In the mold of Jack Carter, he is exceptionally intelligent. Also like that other, far more famous character, he is an unrepentant criminal. Billy knows full well who and what he is, which gives him an almost admirable self-confidence. Unlike the Carter novels, however, Billy Rags features a more down-beat tale. There are no mysteries to solve or murders to avenge. There is only a determined and fiercely capable man hell-bent on getting back to his wife and young son. Reading of Billy sizing up and besting the cops and other criminal rivals is plenty engaging.
I must say that the book seems like a slighty unpolished product, though. There are a few parts of the narrative that seem to have needed keener editing, especially involving the several flashbacks sprinkled through the first half of the book. These parts are certainly interesting, and they add depth to Billy. They do seem a tad clumsy at times, though, as if Lewis wasn't really sure of where to place them in the modern narrative.
Though this is not the Ted Lewis book that I would recommend starting with, it's one worth reading if you enjoyed Get Carter (or Jack's Return Home, as it was named in the U.K.) or Jack Carter's Law.