"Our fascination with The Great Train Robbery shows no sign of fading. It's Britain's real-life Wizard of Oz—no matter how familiar the tale, we can never resist savoring it just one more time... This well-written book also tackles the question of why the crime still holds our attention." —The Spectator
"This racing read reveals a strangely seductive lost world." —The Independent on Sunday
"For the robbers who lost their liberty, all they had left was the myth of a brilliant crime. But that myth is comprehensively blown away by this thorough and often gripping book." —The Sunday Times
"With hindsight, the irony is that The Great Train Robbery was not a harbinger of the Swinging Sixties, but rather, with its cast of cops and criminals in matching trilbies, a reminder of the old Britain—class-bound and violent yet still strangely innocent—that was about to be swept away." —Mail on Sunday
"A cool analysis of a violent and daring raid that still frustrates investigators and fascinates aficionados of big-time crime." —Saga Magazine
"The idea that the great train robbery was a masterpiece of planning and execution by the cream of Britain's villains has been strangely persistent. In fact, as Nick Russell-Pavier and Stewart Richards' fascinating, if mildly obsessive, new book proves, this was always a myth that handily suited everybody involved: police, media and the criminals themselves." —Daily Mail
"compelling...reveals failings in the initial investigation, but also in the execution of the robbery."— Choice