In ''Murder City'', award-winning writer Charles
Bowden presents a devastating chronicle of a city in
collapse. It begins in January 2008 when a handwritten
list appears on a Juarez monument to fallen police
officers. Under the heading 'those who did not believe'
are the names of five recently murdered cops. And under
the heading 'for those who continue not believing' are
seventeen names. A few days later their bodies start to
appear. But in Juarez, it is not just the police and
drug cartel members who die; the violence infects every
level of society. With hallucinatory prose and piercing
detail Bowden reveals the lives of its residents: Miss
Sinaloa, a raped beauty queen whose spiraling madness
reflects that of the town that has consumed her; Emilio,
a reporter who made the mistake of writing the truth and
must now flee north for his life; El Pastor, a born
again Christian who runs an insane asylum in the desert;
and, the chilling sicario, or hitman, who has dreamt of
his own death while whispering the secrets of his
trade.As Bowden interweaves these stories into a broader
meditation on Juarez's descent into anarchy, he reveals
a city made by two countries and two histories, and
takes an axe to Mexican and U.S. government and media
myths of the war on drugs. In Juarez the war is for
drugs; the police and the military fight for their share
of the profits; the press is restrained by the murder of
reporters; and, the line between the government and the
drug cartels has never existed. 'In this new way of
life, no one is really in charge-and no one is safe',
writes Bowden. 'The violence has crossed class lines.
The violence is everywhere. It is like the dust in the
air, part of life itself'. Heartbreaking, disturbing,
and unforgettable, ''Murder City'' establishes Bowden as
one of our leading visionaries working at the height of
his powers. |
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