'They say I've killed 40 people and who am I to disagree? I've always
liked even numbers.'
Branded the dentist for using pliers to extract the teeth of those who
owed money to his boss Charlie Richardson, Frankie Fraser was labelled
the most dangerous man in Britain by two Home Secretaries. He is famous
for his crimes, many of which have entered gangster folklore. In these
diaries, however, originally published when he was 78, Mad Frank delved
into areas he had never chosen, or dared, to talk about before.
His day-by-day entries record unsolved murders, shoot-outs, crooked
coppers, bribery, extortion, wrongful convictions, and even sex in
prison. And by contrast, he also opens up with personal memories of
growing up in poverty, in London's East End, and the reality of having
to steal food to feed the family.
Frankie Frasier died in 2014, and this rare True Crime classic is
first-hand history at its most compelling.