Go
 

  Get this audio book:




Learn More About
Find More Titles by
This Author: William Queen
This Narrator: Don Leslie
This Publisher: Random House Audio

Under and Alone by William Queen

Under and Alone

by William Queen


Title Details

Author
Narrator
Publisher
 
Unabridged Edition
Running Time
8 Hrs. 14 Min.

Description

In 1998, William Queen was a veteran law-enforcement agent with a lifelong love of motorcycles and a lack of patience with paperwork. When a "confidential informant" made contact with his boss at the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, offering to take an agent inside the San Fernando chapter of the Mongols (the scourge of Southern California, and one of the most dangerous gangs in America), Queen jumped at the chance - not realizing that he was kicking-starting the most extensive undercover operation inside an outlaw motorcycle gang in the history of American law enforcement.

Nor did Queen suspect that he would penetrate the gang so successfully that he would become a fully "patched-in" member, eventually rising through their ranks to the office of treasurer, where he had unprecedented access to evidence of their criminal activity. After Queen spent 28 months as "Billy St. John", the bearded, beer-swilling, Harley-riding gang-banger, the truth of his identity became blurry, even to himself.

From Queen's first sleight of hand with a line of methamphetamine in front of him and a knife at his throat, to the fearsome face-off with their decades-old enemy, the Hell's Angels (a brawl that left three bikers dead), to the heartbreaking scene of a father ostracized at Parents' Night because his deranged-outlaw appearance precluded any interaction with regular citizens, Under and Alone is a breathless, adrenaline-charged listen. It will put you on the street with some of the most dangerous men in America and with the law enforcement agents who risk everything to bring them in.


People Who Liked Under and Alone Also Liked These Titles:
  The Unmapped Mind
by Christian Donlan

  Fanny Crosby
by Bernard Ruffin

  How May We Hate You?
by Todd Dakotah Briscoe