
Evening Standard March 8 2005
'This is an extraordinary book ... gripping and coherent ....
a major achievement'
Professor JEAN LA FONTAINE
Times Educational Supplement March 18 2005
'courageous ... fearless ... so closely and cogently argued that
it demands attention'
GERALD HAIGH
Evening Standard
'This is an extraordinary book ... gripping and coherent ... a
major achievement.'
Professor Jean La Fontaine
Times Educational Supplement
'courageous ... fearless ... so closely and cogently argued that
it demands attention'
Gerald Haigh
Mail on Sunday
'epic ... valuable'
John Williams
Western Mail
'Totally compelling ... fascinating, disturbing'
Dean Powell
Earl Howe, Shadow health minister
'This book has made the scales fall from my eyes ... It is a book
of national importance.'
Book Description
The Secret of Bryn Estyn tells the story of the gravest series
of miscarriages of justice in recent British history – how
innocent lives have been destroyed, the public deceived and millions
of pounds wasted in a hunt for a dark conspiracy which existed
only in the imagination of the investigators.
In 1991 rumours began to circulate in North Wales that Bryn Estyn,
a home for adolescent boys on the outskirts of Wrexham, was the
centre of a paedophile ring. A massive police investigation was
launched which, over the next ten years, spread to care homes
throughout Britain. Thousands were accused, hundreds arrested,
and the prisons began to fill up with convicted care workers.
Had we at last faced up to a horrifying reality? Or had we unleashed
an entirely new kind of witch-hunt? Richard Webster has spent
nine years uncovering what really happened in North Wales. The
result is one of the most remarkable works of investigation ever
written.
Synopsis
In 1991 rumours began to circulate in North Wales that Bryn Estyn,
a home for adolescent boys on the outskirts of Wrexham, was the
centre of a paedophile ring. A massive police investigation was
launched which, over the next ten years, spread to care homes
throughout Britain. Thousands were accused, hundreds arrested,
and the prisons began to fill up with convicted care workers.
Had we at last faced up to a horrifying reality? Or had we unleashed
an entirely new kind of witch-hunt? Richard Webster has spent
nine years uncovering what really happened in North Wales. The
result is one of the most remarkable works of investigation ever
written.
About the Author
RICHARD WEBSTER was born in 1950 and studied English literature
at the University of East Anglia. He is the author of 'A Brief
History of Blasphemy: Liberalism, Censorship and "The Satanic
Verses"' (1990), 'Why Freud Was Wrong: Sin, Science and Psychoanalysis'
(Harper Collins, 1995) and the Great Philosophers volume 'Freud'
(Weidenfeld, 2003). His book about a contemporary witch-hunt,
'The Great Children's Home Panic', was published in 1998. He lives
in Oxford and a collection of his essays, articles and reviews
can be found at richardwebster.net
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