Who Bombed the Hilton
By (Author) Rachel Landers
NewSouth Publishing
NewSouth Publishing
1st April 2016
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Terrorism, armed struggle
363.32509944109047
Paperback
416
Width 135mm, Height 210mm, Spine 33mm
386g
I unpick and put in chronological order thousands of pieces of paper lay out the facts as they arrived the first time, unadorned, uninterpreted, flying in from dozens of sources and every corner of the world.
What really went on Were the police corrupt Did the conspiracy theorists believe what they wanted to believe
Whodidbomb the Hilton
On 13 February 1978 a bomb exploded outside the Hilton Hotel in George Street, Sydney. Two garbage collectors and a police officer were killed. Often called the first act of terrorist murder on Australian soil, the crime is still unsolved.
Award-winning filmmaker and historian Rachel Landers wrestles with the evidence to unravel this complex cold case in forensic detail, exposing corruption, conspiracy theories and political intrigue and a prime suspect.
"Rachel Landers' Who Bombed the Hilton is a terrifying tale written with sparkling good humour and panache. Landers takes a 'tatty, fractured saga' of the horrific terrorist attack in the heart of Sydney, and, backed by remarkable research, she brings it to life. She makes of it a testament to the victims and the investigators, as well as a warning to us in our own age of terror. As we struggle with terrorism, and with the danger of damaging our democracy by our measures to counter it, we do well to remember this story of 'the one who got away.' "Anna Funder
A terrifying tale written with sparkling good humour and panache.
- Anna Funder
Rachel Landers is an award-winning documentary filmmaker and co-founder of the production company Pony Films. She completed a PhD in history at Sydney University, a post-graduate directing course at NIDA and is now head of documentary the Australian Film and Television School. Her films have screened at numerous international festivals and have been shortlisted for various awards including the Chicago Film Festivals Gold Hugo and two Australian Film Industry Awards (writing and direction) for the film Revisionism. Her film The Snowman won the Sydney Film Festival documentary prize. Her most recent film The Inquisition, about police corruption and the Wood Royal Commission, was screened on ABC1 in 2011.