Welcome to Milo Books, the premier independent publishing house in the north of England. Founded in 1997, our company has rapidly become one of the most energetic and hard-hitting non-fiction publishers in the UK. We specialise in true crime, autobiography/biography, sports, current affairs and youth culture, but look to publish great books in any non-fiction genre. We aim to bring extraordinary true-life stories to the widest possible audience. Featured Title:  THE BLACKPOOL ROCK | THE BLACKPOOL ROCK
Guns, Gangs and Door Wars in Britain's Wildest Town
Steve Sinclair
ISBN: 978-1-903854-80-8 FORMAT: Paperback EXTENT: 237pp including 12pp of photographs
Steve Sinclair was the toughest doorman in the wildest resort in Britain and if you crossed him, payback was swift and certain. His new book offers a candid insight into the dangerous world of the modern doorman and of the extreme methods he sometimes uses to defend himself and his customers and to uphold his hard-won reputation. |
Please use our website to browse our list, find out more about our titles and see what's in the news. You can purchase books from us securely online, or if you wish to place a trade order, or are a foreign publisher enquiring about rights, please follow the relevant links. | |  In all good bookshops this month is Hookers by Julian Davies (£7.99, pb) the most candid account ever of life inside Britain's underground sex industry. An exclusive extract from the book will appear in Wales on Sunday on 18 May with more press to follow.
Crime City (£7.99, pb) Joseph O'Neill's fascinating account of the criminal underworld in Victorian Manchester received a glowing report in the Manchester Evening News recently that described the book as 'a rollicking tale packed with characters and incident.' We couldn't agree more. To order the book click here
Michael Macilwee's highly anticipated sequel to the bestseller, The Gangs of Liverpool, is also published this month and is available to order now. Tearaways (£7.99, pb) was recently the subject of a two-part serialisation in the Liverpool Echo and the book is reviewed in a forthcoming issue of the BBC magazine, Who Do You Think You Are?
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