The only authorized, authentic book about the Hell's Angels by founding member, Sonny Barger
Hell's Angel chronicles the origins and rise of the Hell’s Angels Motorcycle Club through the eyes of its founding member. Sonny Barger started the Oakland chapter of the Hell’s Angels in the late 50s with a loose-knit group of high school dropouts and social outcasts. Bonded by the love of motorcycles, they formed a cadre of hard-driving hombres and answered the call of the open road.
Hell's Angel is not only a story of motorcycles, it is a tale of loyalty and betrayal, subcultures and brotherhood and freedom. It is Sonny’s fight for personal freedom and his right to exist with a band of individuals who choose an alternative life.
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Most Helpful Reviews
★★★★★
3.0
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An interesting counterpart to HS Thompson's hysteria, but a whitewash
OK, it's not like I was there, but on reading this, clearly Barger as an older man wants to rehabilitate himself and the clubs and mythology he helped to create. Honest? I don't think so, or maybe it would be more accurate to say that this is substantially incomplete. Read some of the other first-person accounts of biker culture from the era and you'll see the mismatch. Random violence, intimidation, sexual assault, destructive drug abuse, were very much a part of the 'culture'. To hear Barger describe it, it was just a lot of misfits banded together drinking beer and riding their bikes because nobody else would have them.
I read this back to back with Hunter S Thompson's similarly titled book, and granted, Thompson's penchant for hysteria and exaggeration cast the Angels in a cartoonish, sensational glare. I'm not surprised that they kicked his ass around after it was published. Thompson does however look into some of the roots of the biker 'movement' and the formation of many biker clubs in the wake of World War 2, and that's interesting.
HA clearly relish their mystique, including the fear their presence creates and the mythology of the 'freedom' of their lifestyle. Thompson pointed out that many of the so-called 'one-percenters' just liked to don the costume and go hang out with other bonafide and wannabe badasses down at their 'HQ'. And then on Monday morning it was back to work and 'bring home a quart of milk honey'. In fairness to the Angels though, it seems clear that much of their mystique was created by gross overreaction on the part of police to some events, and the sensationalization thereof by the media. In reading both of these books it seems that the overwhelming majority of the violence committed by HA was to each other.
I'm into motorcycles, but I share little or no affinity with the 'hawg' crowd and their butt jewelery, pretending to be badasses, and from what I read, HA feel the same. The rise of biker gang culture parallels an interesting time in postwar American culture though, and the vestiges of it are now mainstream and for sale - right down at your local H-D 'boutique'.
Barger is undeniably an interesting character, obviously intelligent, cunning, charismatic and a leader of men. One has to wonder what he might have done with his life had he channeled his talents and energies elsewhere.
13 people found this helpful
★★★★★
4.0
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Interesting Read!
The title of this review refers more to the polarity of the reviews on this site than the book itself. There are people that say that Sonny Barger is an "American Hero" and others that think he is a worthless criminal. The latter opinion is legitimate but seemingly repressed, as if some people feel the need pay homage to Sonny himself - never mind the book - or be killed.
But the truth is that those personal opinions about Barger are irrelevant. I don't think you need to take a position one way or another on Sonny himself in order to enjoy the book. Reading this book is like sitting at a bar with Barger having a few beers and listening to him tell his stories. I would be fascinated either by Jesus Christ or Adolf Hitler because both have things to say that would interest me. What's the problem?
I have read other Sonny Barger books and what I like about his style is that he is unpretentious. There is no doubt in my mind that much of the detail is BS, but I have met guys somewhat like Sonny and you don't dislike them because they embellish a little here and there. It is part of who they are. Sonny has a big ego, and it's understandable given his experiences. Look past some of the more fantastic stuff and after hearing his stories, you still have had an enjoyable evening of drinking and laughing and storytelling.
It was interesting to read Hunter S. Thompson's "Hell's Angels" just before I read Sonny's book. Thompson is an incredible writer, a claim that can't be made in reference to Sonny. But I want the facts about Sonny and the Hell's Angels, and after reading both books, I wonder if Barger's version isn't just a bit more believable, embellishments or not. I recommend both. You can decide.
And if you are a real rider, pretty much all of Sonny's books are interesting in one way or another, because you know where the guy is coming from.
12 people found this helpful
★★★★★
5.0
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Sonny Barger the HAMC legend lives on..
Loved everything about Sonny's book and have been wanting to read it for a while; finally got to read it and finished it in 3 days. What I liked was the way Sonny told it like it is and wondered what his "family" was like growing up; kind of felt sorry for him as his mother left him at an early age and his dad was a working drunk as his big sister took care of him, then later the U.S. Army took care of him but he had to get out because he was under age. It's as though I'm a friend of his and think like he does; of course I'm a biker too and know what he was talking about anyway! One of the things on my bucket list is to meet the "Chief". It's too bad he got throat cancer from smoking too much I guess but he seems to be holding up OK and Sonny lives in a nice warm state I like to live in which is Arizona. Some of the stories were funny with black humor, some were bitter sweet and some were down right sad and ugly. The life of a Hells Angel can be a pretty rough life sometimes but at least the HAMC Take care of each other to the death. One of the stories I liked was about "Magoo" and "Terry the Tramp", also the story about his wifes were real interesting. Anyone that is a true biker needs to have Hell's Angel: The Life and Times of Sonny Barger and the Hell's Angels Motorcycle Club in their collection and have the kids read it.
Peace,
Sluggo
11 people found this helpful
★★★★★
3.0
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I could get beat up for this...
I bought this book as part of a life-long fascination with motorcycles and the culture that surrounds them. What I got was a treat for the first few times I read it, but as the fun wore off, the reality was glaring through.
This is a fun read. It's well written and doesn't drag on in areas like other autobiographies/biographies. It covers a lot of the more well known Hell's Angels fiascos (Altamont, the Monterrey rape trial, etc). And it does show that a life of crime does not come without reprocussions.
That said, it's self-serving for Barger and as the book wears on, his egomania gets annoying. I would never say this to his face though, as I don't benchpress his reported 290 pounds, nor am I surrounded by biker buddies who lack self-restraint.
Of the more interesting notes in the book are his opinions of Harley-Davidsons. Apparently he only rides them because that's what is expected of a Hell's Angel. He goes into detail about the superiority of Hondas and Triumphs. Odd from the poster child for the Harley rebel culture.
My advice is to check out the book from the local library. If you really like it, then buy it. But, take it from a guy who read the darn thing about 50 times (it was a good book for the bathroom): the fun is short lived.
8 people found this helpful
★★★★★
5.0
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If you love 81 and the big Red Machine like I do
If you love 81 and the big Red Machine like I do, then this is REQUIRED reading! Sonny Barger is beyond a simple American Legend, he is what American Legends are made from. I can't really describe how great this book is, you just have to read it for yourself.
7 people found this helpful
★★★★★
4.0
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It is very good read for anyone just wanting to know more about ...
This book is of the life & times of the Hell's Angels, from the view of a club members, & up to the views of him as the President of the club. It gives information that, until the author reveals it, it was actually unknown to the public. It is very good read for anyone just wanting to know more about the motor cycle club. It tells some of the things a person has to go through to join their club. It also gives different details about other times in the author's life, of his personal life, & some of the details of the times he spent in prison. This book covers time line of the early stages of the club up till the author wrote the book. It mainly focuses on more of the early years of the club life.
6 people found this helpful
★★★★★
5.0
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Great Read
I bought this book thinking it would be Sonny Barger saying the Hells Angels are just a motorcycle club and nothing else but it was a seemingly very honest book. I was actually sorry it ended so soon. I am positive he could write a hundred more and I would read them all. It's very well written and has some great photos. I tried to read Hunter S. Thompson's Hells Angels book and lost interest after about 50 pages of rambling. Got this book and hope to find more from the author.
5 people found this helpful
★★★★★
1.0
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Sonny on a roll.....
Sonny Barger continues to make it all about him, and how great he is, was. According to him, pretty much the sun setting is because of him. Ralph continues to show his absolute stupidity in speaking of the Angels as though they were the best thing since canned beer. These guys are straight up criminals, period. To glorify them and put them on a platform is wrong. I was a hang around for almost two years in Cali and Arizona. These are not nice guys, they are the kind who will hurt you if you look sideways at them. One thing Ralph got right in the book-the japs build a better bike than HD ever will. And I doubt that every turn of the wrench on his bike was proceeded by a "sniff of sweet cocaine." All the wrenching needed to build a bike, would have led to even an elephant od'ing. You are not so cool, Ralph, point is you are almost gone. I tossed this piece of trash into my wood burning stove.
5 people found this helpful
★★★★★
5.0
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"The Sun Never sets on a Hell's Angel Patch."
The microcosm birth of the Hell's Angels motorcycle club evolved in the Fontana/ San Bernardino, California area on April 1957. Ralph Robert Barger,(Sonny) who was only 19 years old, was the founder and leader of the Hell's Angels San Bernardino motorcycle club.
Sonny Barger's book, "Hell's Angel" is the only authorized, genuine story about the, sometimes, but not always, controversial motorcycle club founded by the author himself.
In reading, "Hell's Angel," the reader might disagree, agree and perhaps even sympathize with the story and history of the Hell's Angels' motorcycle club. More often than not different law enforcement agencies classified the Hell's Angels as a `criminal organization' for usurping the American legal system.
It is up to the reader to make his or her own assessment whether those law enforcement agencies were correct in their judgment of the Hell's Angels; or if they were prejudiced in their appraisal of the motorcycle club (MC).
Many believe the original Angels were members of the U.S. Army's 11th Airborne Division; an elite group of paratroopers trained to rain death on the enemy from above, drifting in behind the lines of battle.
"They called themselves the Hells Angels because they flew on silk wings into hell itself, bringing a brutal hope for peace with 20 pounds of TNT strapped to each leg. The nickname was a badge of honor, a mark of invincibility, a wartime emblem pointing out the toughest of the tough. It was a totem to ward off the worst."
"A handful of those original Hells Angels, and many other returning soldiers who had awakened to the nightmare of war, found it difficult to settle into the half-sleep of the American Dream. After living on the edge so long, they found only a depressing fatalism and monotony in jobs, family, mortgages, and college, suburbia and cookie-cutter houses with white-picket fences." And so they joined the MC.
According to Sonny Barger, "The Hell's Angels is an organization; a group of people, who get together to ride motorcycles and have fun, and go to parties." "... Just because certain people in the Hell's Angels have committed crimes in the past does not make the organization a criminal organization."
Under Barger's guidance, the Hells Angels chapters came together, hammering out bylaws, codes of conduct, outlawing the practice of using drugs, choosing patches, colors, tattoos and clubhouses. The Hell's Angel's made sure that no one used their "Patch" who had not been accepted in the MC, or who were not worthy of their motorcycle club. The MC is a close-knit motorcycle club who not only fights to preserve the dignity of their "Patch," but take care, protect, and stand by one another to the fullest.
There were other motorcycle clubs, throughout the United States, who not only rivaled the Hell's Angels but tried to outdo them as well. However, law enforcement organizations did not excoriated those motorcycle clubs as they hammered the anvil of law enforcement against the Hell's Angels.
The Hell's Angel reputation crashed into the public consciousness in 1954 when Marlon Brando starred in "The Wild One," a Hollywood sensation inspired by the rumble at Hollister.
All the while, the Hell's Angels boldness more than irritated all types of law enforcement. And in the late 1970s and early 1980s, the government tried to pin an official organized crime label on the group, trying to prosecute the Hells Angels under laws originally designed to combat the Mafia. The alleged violations of racketeering, influence and corrupt organization (RICO) laws, however, were never proved, with two hung juries that were unable to decide on 38 of 44 separate charges.
There were many high-profile accusations, arrests and acquittals - suggesting either the Angels are slippery or that police like to arrest them despite flimsy evidence. Many believe the truth lies between both theories.
George Christie, longtime president of the Ventura, Calif., chapter, who is considered Barger's second-in-command and likely successor; admits the Hell's Angels are "not monks." Nevertheless, he insists that if they were as bad as police allege, they would've been jailed and disbanded years ago." George Christi adds, "...cops chase Angels because Angels are easy to chase. Finding real criminals is much tougher, and would require investigative initiative beyond pulling over every biker wearing the infamous winged death's-head."
For their part, the Angels continue to deny all criminal charges, and in 1998 happily celebrated their 50th anniversary.
The Angels have grown, in the past 50 years, to include many chapters in the United States, a presence in many countries and a worldwide membership estimated in the thousands.
I recommend, to the interested reader, Sonny Barger's book, "Hell's Angel" before reading any other books, or magazine articles on the subject of the famous motorcycle club; The Hell's Angels.
5 people found this helpful
★★★★★
3.0
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insights into a secretive organization from the man who knows it best
This may be the most difficult review that I have written to date because I began reading this book with a certain amount of prejudice. I have ridden motorcycles for about forty years and I began at about the time that the Hell's Angels motorcycle club was coming to national prominence, so it seems as though I have been hearing stories of the Angels all of my life.
I recall the expose' "Hell's Angels: A Strange and Terrible Saga" which Hunter Thompson wrote many years ago about the Hell's Angels and never did put a lot of stock in what he wrote, because I didn't feel that any group could be as vicious and vile as he described them and exist for any length of time. I opened Hell's Angel expecting it to be slanted just as heavily in the opposite direction and that Sonny would portray the Angels as being kind innocent victims somehow, but as I began to read I realized that there was a gritty, raw and open honesty in his writing. I began to trust his words and I now believe that this is the most accurate writing about this well known, revered and often feared organization that has ever been written.
Normally when writing a book review the personality of the author is set aside and the work is evaluated on it's own merit, but since this story is the history of the motorcycle club intertwined with an autobiography of Sonny Barger it is neccessary to say a few words about my impression of the author.
Sonny mentions very early in the story that he liked military service and based on what I read as the story continued I think it's a shame that the Army booted him, because I think that he would have made a very good soldier. Not only is he a natural leader, but the brotherhood with the Angels, that he mentions repeatedly is really espirit de corps, which is a highly desirable quality in combat situations. Being a Viet Nam veteran I know that when it's all on the line you have to know that the soldier next to you will lay his life down for you if neccessary and he must know the same about you, not just believe it but "Know" it. That's the same kind of loyalty toward each other that Sonny refers to within the club.
There are many references to the Hell's Angels being an outlaw club, but I don't think that Sonny is an outlaw in the truest sense of the word. Webster defines an outlaw as a habitual or notorious criminal. Although Sonny by his own admission has gotten crosswise of the law on many occasions, I don't believe that his primary means of support has ever been through criminal activity.
As mentioned earlier Hell's Angel is a combination of club history and autobiography. The format is very good, it opens with a few entertaining anecdotes that give you a feel for the character and personality of the club members and grabs the readers attention immediately. Chapter two begins Sonny's autobiography from childhood and the story develops as he describes the events that led up to his interest in motorcycles and the foundation of the club. The well paced story continues with stories pertaining to the evolution of the motocycle club and explanations of many of the high profile events that caught national media attention in the history of the Hell's Angels. Barger sums up with his own health problems and with the Hell's Angels present status and what he believes that the future holds for the club.
Although I feel that this story is laid out well and the information is solid the one constant distraction that caused me to downgrade it to three stars is the repeated use of vulgar profanity. Sonny may talk this way in his daily life, but in my opinion it should not be used in his writing. I know that anyone who has read Ivory Hunter would say, but Frank you use profanity in your writing. Well that's true, but mild profanity and only in thoughts and dialogue in order to keep the characters (in character) never in the narrative. Although while writing a true story as Sonny has done there are times when profanity is needed in exact quotes for the credibility of the story, there is no place for profanity in the narrative. This is of course only my opinion, but I think that Sonny should follow this basic rule, as it has detracted from what otherwise is a very fine piece of work.