Cutting through the myths about the white market,
Tome Feiling's ''The Candy Machine'' is the story of
cocaine as it's never been told before. Gabrielle
unwinds at weekends with a line of coke - and also works
for a major police force. Juan Pablo is a drugs mule in
Bogota who gets his stash from a sweathouse. Belica
started picking coca when she was eleven. Kurt Schmoke,
former mayor of Baltimore, thinks legalization's the
only way...Cocaine is big business. Governments spend
millions on an unwinnable war against it, yet it's now
the drug of choice in the West. How did the cocaine
economy get so huge? Who keeps it running behind the
scenes? In ''The Candy Machine'' Tom Feiling travels the
trade routes from Colombia via Miami, Kingston and
Tijuana to London and New York. He meets Medellin
hitmen, US kingpins, British crack users and Brazilian
traffickers, and talks to the soldiers and narcotics
officers who fight the gangs. ''An important study of
the cultivation, usage and suppression of cocaine''.
(''Financial Times''). ''The Candy Machine is highly
addictive''. (''Metro''). ''It is hard to decide if Tom
Feiling's future lies as a QC or the new Paul Theroux.A
vivid, argumentative, arresting book''. (''Sunday
Telegraph''). ''I've read a few documentary accounts of
the rise of cocaine, and this might be the best of
them''. (''Evening Standard''). Tom Feiling is an
award-winning documentary film-maker. He spent a year
living and working in Colombia before making
''Resistencia: Hip-Hop in Colombia'', which won numerous
awards at film festivals around the world, and was
broadcast in four countries. In 2003 he became Campaigns
Director for the TUC's Justice for Colombia campaign,
which organizes for human rights in Colombia. His book
''Short Walks from Bogota: Journeys in the new
Colombia'' is published by Allen Lane. |
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