'Synopsis
Walter Ellis grew up in East Belfast. His father was a commercial traveller, his
mother a housewife. He and his sister were not abused as children. Ellis was
never forced to wear girls' clothes or spend days naked in a cold cellar.
Instead, he was sent to school each day and to church on Sunday. In the summer,
he and his family went on holiday to the seaside. But, determined that he should
not suffer from the crippling disadvantage of a happy Irish childhood, Ellis
systematically set about destroying everything that gave him stability. He was
expelled from school and dropped out of not one, but two universities. He also
acquired as his best friend the Protestant renegade Ronnie Bunting, who, as
chief of staff of the INLA, murdered Airey Neave, the Shadow Secretary of State
for Northern Ireland, in the carpark of the House of Commons. Bunting was an
extraordinary, demonic personality. He once foisted Joe McCann, Ireland's Most
Wanted man, on Ellis's mum for the weekend and gave Walter a suitcase to look
after that turned out to contain over a hundred thousand pounds - the proceeds
of an armed robbery. The last straw came when Ellis was arrested by Special
Branch in England on suspicion of plotting to assassinate top government
minister William Whitelaw. "The Beginning of the End" is like nothing
else that has come out of the Ulster Troubles and is sure to shock, intrigue and
entertain.
About the Author
Walter Ellis contributes to the Sunday Times, the Times Higher Education
Supplement and The Spectator, as well as a variety of US papers.
Amazon.co.uk Beginning of the End The Crippling Disadvantage of a Happy Irish Childhood Books