Send Them to Hell: The Brutal Horrors of Bangkok's Nightmare Jails
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.54 (503 Votes) |
Asin | : | 1845965817 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 304 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2016-05-13 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
Sebastian Williams now lives in Spain in semi-retirement with his family. He is working on his next book.
About the AuthorSebastian Williams now lives in Spain in semi-retirement with his family. He is working on his next book.
Honest, harrowing account of a miscarriage of justice This is the true story of 17 years in the life of a man called Sly. We learn little about him other than that he is British, married to a Thai, and living and working in Bangkok until he is arrested at a bank one day while waiting to meet a client and charged with buying and possessing heroin. Despite the lack of any proper evidence, he is eventually sentenced to death. . Amazon Customer said Lacked realism, lacked authenticity, poorly written. This story was highly exaggerated, living in Thailand I can see much of this was made up. The storyline had many holes and was just not believable. For anyone who has lived in Thailand, you can see that many parts just didn't add up. Other books out there with more accurate stories. Waste of money and time, I threw the book out halfway through.. Kevinnevik said Send them to hell. I enjoyed this book as a narrative, but think it lacked realism. Decent story, but I don't believe it was true. The author did not even spell the name of the prison correctly.
Send Them to Hell is a horrifying, authentic chronicle of life as lived by foreign inmates over the past two decades in Bangkok's notorious prison system. Sebastian Williams has graphically revealed this shocking reality through the eyes of a long-term inmate who has endured at first hand the unimaginable, inhuman nightmare that constitutes the Thai penal system.. Murder, human-rights abuse, drugs, prisoner and child sex slavery, blackmail, extortion, extreme violence, medical maltreatment, and unjustifiable death penalties