Sweet Agony cover art

Sweet Agony

This Novel Won an Arthur Koestler Literary Award

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Sweet Agony

By: Paul Sykes
Narrated by: Craig Hannaway
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About this listen

Not heard of Paul Sykes?

Mentioned in the book Legends by Charles Bronson, an A to Z guide of the men Bronson had regarded to be the toughest in Britain. Referring to "Sykesy", Bronson describes him as "a Legend, Born and Bred" and writing: "I first met Sykes in Liverpool in the early 70s and at that time he was probably the fittest Con in Britain. A notorious hard man from Yorkshire, a fighting man in every sense. A lot of people never liked him, perhaps they even feared him but I respected the man for what he stood for." Bronson goes on to relate an incident said to have taken place in HMP Liverpool, where Sykes "allegedly" killed the prison's cat and fashioned it into a "Davey Crocket" style hat, I think you get the gist!

Sykes had also been billed to fight Lenny Mclean at London's Rainbow Theatre on November 20, 1979, but this fight never materialized. Lenny Mclean, in his autobiography The Guv'nor, later explained: "A week before the off, Sykes went into a club in Wakefield where he lives, got well p-ssed and had a ruck with four doormen. He did them all but one of them got lucky and put a cut above his eye that took eight stitches to pull together" and the fight was off.

Sykes, Paul; b. May 23, 1946, only son of Walter Sykes and Betty Barlow, market and shop retailers, Wakefield, Yorkshire. Represented England and County at every amateur boxing level. Contested the British and Commonwealth Heavyweight title as a professional. Holder of Distinction and bar, Royal Life-Saving Society. Qualified football referee. Holder of the British amateur weightlifting record, deep knee bend 5001/2lb. Much travelled in the UK Prison System: 25 transfers in 20 years to three prison regions, 11 prisons and three special wings. Educ: Snapethorpe Secondary Modern, Wakefield Technical College. City and Guilds Bricklaying 1966 and 1975. BA (physical sciences) OPen University (1982). His novel Sweet Agony won an Arthur Koestler Literary Award in 1988.

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What listeners say about Sweet Agony

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Big head

Not to bad bit of a big head but we'll worth a listen thought it would of been more bout prison then boxing

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Great story, really well read

absolutely brilliantly written, perfect prose, pretty amazing considering it was written by a convict/boxer.

the fella reading it as well does it justice, with the right amount if humour in his voice to convey the Sykes's madcap adventures.

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Realism

Fantastic listen. No bullshit, says it how it is and how it was. I encourage anyone to give it a listen. A weird and wonderful story

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    1 out of 5 stars
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cure for insomnia

didn't finish,but fell asleep...over and over.
not the book I thought it was and am stuck with it .

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all over the place

struggled to flow it and some pretty trivial content. wouldn't recommend, you can tell ges written it himself because it makes little sense. There are some funny one liners though.

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self confessed nonce

This book doesn't really get going for me , no excitement not gripping, nothing. And the fact he constantly goes on about having sex with a 15yr old as a 30 something bloke makes it hard to listen too

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Paul Sykes

As the great Clinton Baptiste Said. "I'm getting the word nonce".
Written in his own word Sykes describes how he groomed not one but two 15 year old girls when he was 31. Going on to control them both.

No doubt he was a hard man, but how he was respected in the criminal world after his own admission of being a nonce is beyond me.

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