Marsha Woerner reviewed Vagos, Mongols, and Outlaws by Kerrie Droban
Review of 'Vagos, Mongols, and Outlaws' on 'Goodreads'
3 stars
I started read – reading this on Kindle back in May, and I read the first two thirds or so of it. It was a whole section of the Vagos, and it was exciting, intriguing, scary, and a little bit sad. When I finished that section, I thought I was done with the book, but then I got into section 2…
By that point, I could no longer read it, so I switched to the Audio Audible in order to listen to the rest.
The tone kind of changed at that point, and although it was still interesting, somehow I didn't feel as connected. It was still a good book, but I am definitely glad that I could listen to the end instead of continuing to actually read.
I am starting to reconsider a former workmate and friend who was very involved in motorcycles and a motorcycle club back in …
I started read – reading this on Kindle back in May, and I read the first two thirds or so of it. It was a whole section of the Vagos, and it was exciting, intriguing, scary, and a little bit sad. When I finished that section, I thought I was done with the book, but then I got into section 2…
By that point, I could no longer read it, so I switched to the Audio Audible in order to listen to the rest.
The tone kind of changed at that point, and although it was still interesting, somehow I didn't feel as connected. It was still a good book, but I am definitely glad that I could listen to the end instead of continuing to actually read.
I am starting to reconsider a former workmate and friend who was very involved in motorcycles and a motorcycle club back in the late '80s. I do wonder whether his motorcycling was at all involved in any of the illegalities and violence… I know that being a motorcyclists did not necessarily imply that one was involved in gangs by definition, but I do know how close "Snoopy" was to his group, and I know that he communicated and recreated regularly with them.
Just a thought…