Description
Sunderland, 1984. Boots. Braces. Blood on the pavement.
Thirteen-year-old Tommy Robson thinks he knows what loyalty means—until the day he and his mates are battered senseless by the Baston brothers, the most feared family in the North East. Humiliated, desperate, and hungry to matter in a world that chews up working-class kids and spits them out, Tommy makes a choice that will change his life forever.
His older brother Gary returns home from London a changed man—cropped hair, cherry-red Docs, and the hard, proud swagger of a traditional skinhead. He teaches Tommy and his friends the code: unity, pride, style, and standing together when the world wants you dead.
But Hendon is a battleground, and becoming skins doesn’t shield them from the violence—it escalates it.
As the Hendon Skins, six boys try to carve out a place in a collapsing city:
• Boots polished like mirrors
• Speed-fueled nights at The Wheatsheaf
• Oi! gigs that turn into riots
• Running battles with rival firms
• The crushing weight of poverty, family chaos, and bad decisions
Every victory pulls them deeper. Every beating hardens them. Every choice narrows the path until there’s only two directions left: the cemetery or the prison yard.
For Tommy, survival means becoming something darker, meaner, and more dangerous than he ever imagined. And once blood is spilled, there’s no going back.
Gritty. Violent. Heartbreaking.
Skinhead Gang is a brutally authentic coming-of-age story about identity, loyalty, and the cost of trying to be somebody when the world insists you’re nobody. It captures the raw energy of youth spiraling into chaos, the electric pulse of 1980s Britain, and the desperation of boys who mistake fear for respect.
Perfect for fans of Richard Allen, This Is England, The Football Factory, and readers who crave unfiltered working-class fiction that hits like a steel-toe boot.
Step into the streets of Sunderland—where friendships are forged in fists, music is rebellion, and growing up is a war you’re not expected to win.







