cover image Exile on Front Street: My Life as a Hell’s Angel, and Beyond

Exile on Front Street: My Life as a Hell’s Angel, and Beyond

George Christie. St. Martin’s/Dunne, $26.99 (256p) ISBN 978-1-250-09568-8

Christie, a onetime member of the Hells Angels, points out in this lucid member that the greatest threat to an outlaw isn’t cops—it’s his outlaw brothers. Raised in a close-knit Greek-American family in Ventura, Calif., Christie encountered a denim-clad, long-haired biker in 1955 and saw his future. After a stint in the Marines and an unfortunate marriage, Christie started riding with the Angels while raising a family and working for the Department of Defense. Troubled by the club feuds and senseless killings, Christie tried to mediate the strife and rose to the presidency of the Ventura chapter, cementing his role of peacemaker by running with the torch at the 1984 Olympics. Yet no amount of PR could overcome the sectarian squabbling and endless police harassment. Christie is a convincing narrator, though it’s impossible to believe that he’s the Boy Scout he makes himself out to be. Legal concerns may explain his circumspection, and his numerous enemies certainly have a very different take on their disagreements. Sonny Barger, the legendary president of the Oakland Angels, features as a Machiavellian villain, intent on destroying anyone who threatens his place in the spotlight. That said, Christie articulately defends his outlaw code, which he adhered to at great personal cost. Although he resigned from the Angels in 2010, his past, as he engagingly writes, continues to haunt him. As Christie wryly observes, “You don’t just stop being an outlaw.” (Sept.)