An inside look at the deadly street war between Canada’s most violent biker gangs. With frightening and compelling detail, Showdown lets readers experience firsthand the personalities and day-to-day workings behind the brutal and deadly rivalries that mark one piece of Canada’s criminal underworld.
Given how the subject matter naturally intrigues me, I expected to enjoy this book and come out with a strong understanding of how the Hells Angels formed in Canada. The author undoubtedly knows his subject matter, but the plethora of detail isn't relayed in a cohesive and compelling narrative. Every detail -- from trivialities to major events such as gruesome murders -- is given the same weight. As a result, the gravitas of the Hells Angels' crimes never comes across with any force or real darkness. There is also an irritating pattern of name-dropping every gang member's name -- inclusive of the nickname -- enclosed in quotation marks. On one page at least, an entire paragraph was composed of a string of names (and nicknames). This book would have benefited from a narrative that chunked the details into sub-topics and themes -- an arc that would have helped to make sense of the tangled history of the Mafia, Hells Angels, and other one-percenter gangs in Canada, and helped to engage readers on what is a genuinely compelling, if disturbing subject.
Another good example of how a professional journalist can tell a tale and make it both informative and readable, this is very much a focused history of the conflicts between bike clubs in Canada.