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Mass Market Paperback Last Rampage: The Shocking, True Story of an Escaped Convict Book

ISBN: 042512245X

ISBN13: 9780425122457

Last Rampage: The Shocking, True Story of an Escaped Convict

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

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Book Overview

In 1978 convicted murderer Gary Tison escaped from an Arizona prison with the help of his three sons. Over the following two weeks, Tison and his gang roamed the Southwest, murdering six people before... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Good accurate read....

Being from Phoenix I knew the story well. This is a good read, but prepare to meet evil as close to face to face as one can get without actually being there. I couldn't put this book down. I couldn't believe such evil and lack of conscious could reside in one person. Any man who can kill a toddler and involve his own sons in it is really beyond evil. Insane maybe? But, I don't think so. I think that Tison was so full of himself that he thought he'd always get away with the things he had done. And having that IDIOT Cardwell as the warden was Tison's ticket to the outside.... and the multiple murders of innocent people. Unbelievable, but true.

It gave me the creeps!

I read this book in August/September 1991 while traveling through the area where it all happened. The trip was kind of a premarital honeymoon vacation and our first trip to the US (I live in The Netherlands). I bought the book so I could read while off duty from driving the van and I guess it turned out to be a 'lucky' choice. From the first page on I was sucked into the story. I just could not put it away. As the story developed we came nearer to the place where it actually happened. I will never forget the day we passed Flagstaff. The book gave me the creeps. Still does. This book screams to be put into a movie. Gary Tison makes Hannibal Lecter look like a school kid. One of the most chilling books I've ever read!

Story of a true psychopath

As of this writing, it is just over 25 years to the day that convicted murderer Gary Tison escaped from an Arizona State prison with the help of his three teenaged sons and a fellow convict and repeat murderer named Randy Greenawalt. The brazen escape was well-planned and bloodless, but unfortunately the careful planning ended there. Increasingly desperate and disorganized, the five armed and dangerous men soon turned to robbery and murder as they searched for a way to sneak across the Mexican border. Six innocent people died before Tison and his gang were apprehended less than two weeks later. James W. Clarke's story is surprisingly gripping as he recounts a tale that centers around the frightening incompetence in the Arizona State Prison system which allowed Tison and Greenawalt to escape, and the terrible consequences that followed.Clarke should be praised for his research and his attention to detail. He has woven together so many sources that the book actually reads as if he was allowed to shadow the escapees as they roamed around several western states during their time on the run. I was doubtful about this book at first because I didn't see how a prison escape could warrant some 300 pages in a paperback book, but when I stayed up until well after midnight trying to finish it, I realized that Clarke had written an exceptional true-crime story. The author brings alive the desert southwest and the people who live there with his capable writing, making the tale all the more grim as innocent victims are killed by these brutal men. Some readers might find the sections on Arizona politics and corruption in the prison system to be boring or unrelated, but I came to believe that the book was made stronger by the inclusion of this material.Although two of Tison's sons had their sentences commuted to life in prison, Randy Greenawalt was executed in January 1997, eighteen and a half years after his crimes. Clarke doesn't directly comment on the death penalty (which, at the time, had been recently reintroduced in various American states after a Supreme Court decision in favor of it) but instead includes various quotes on the subject from people involved with the case. Readers will have to draw their own conclusions, but surely no one will disagree that Gary Tison was a true psychopath who ruined too many lives, including those of his sons.

"I can't."

- Tison's considered and then stoic & resigned rejection to his clergymen's last desperate appeal to Tison to change his life before the murderous rampage is initiated.I've read it three times and each time is a moving experience.Clarke is just phenomenal.Don't miss this volume.

Madness in my backyard

The highly disorganized and thoughtless crime spree that Clarke describes is one of the most chilling, unpredictable true crime accounts I have encountered. There are not many true crime stories published that document murders that take place in Arizona and I feel that the atmosphere and chaos surrounding this story is well portrayed. Although I am an avid true crime reader, I try to skip over gruesome parts because they seem to lack empathy for the victims by being methodically descriptive. Clarke's description of the crimes instigated by two desperate sociopaths who had absolutely no regard for human life put me in the shoes of the victims. I will never forget the way I felt after reading the chapter about young family that were the first victims of Gary Tison and Randy Greenawalt. It is no longer hard for me to imagine how vulnerable we can be when we feel that we are within the safe confines of our family.
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