Blood Barrios: Dispatches from the World's Deadliest Streets
Autor Alberto Arce Traducere de John Washington, Daniela Ugazen Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 feb 2018
Welcome
to
a
country
that
has
a
higher
casualty
rate
than
Iraq.
Wander
streets
considered
the
deadliest
in
the
world.
Wake
up
each
morning
to
another
batch
of
corpses—sometimes
bound,
often
mutilated—lining
the
roads.
Witness
the
screeching
blue
light
of
police
sirens
and
the
huddles
of
“red
journalists”
who
make
a
living
chasing
after
the
bloodshed.
They are scenes that conjure up a war zone, but Honduras is, at least officially, not at war. Ignored by the outside world, this Central American country is ravaged by ultraviolent drug cartels and an equally ruthless, militarized law force. Corruption is rife and the justice system is woefully ineffective. Prisons are full to bursting and barrios are flooded with drugs from South America en route to the United States. Cursed by geography, the people are trapped here, caught in a system of poverty and cruelty with no means of escape.
For many years, Alberto Arce was the only foreign correspondent in Tegucigalpa, Honduras’s beleaguered capital. He has seen first-hand the country’s descent into anarchy. InBlood Barrioshe shares his experiences in a series of gripping and atmospheric dispatches: from earnest conversations with narcos, taxi drivers, and soldiers, to exposés of state corruption and harrowing accounts of the aftermath of violence. Provocative, revelatory, and heart-rending,Blood Barriosshines a light on the suffering and stoicism of the Honduran people, and demands action from a complacent international community.
They are scenes that conjure up a war zone, but Honduras is, at least officially, not at war. Ignored by the outside world, this Central American country is ravaged by ultraviolent drug cartels and an equally ruthless, militarized law force. Corruption is rife and the justice system is woefully ineffective. Prisons are full to bursting and barrios are flooded with drugs from South America en route to the United States. Cursed by geography, the people are trapped here, caught in a system of poverty and cruelty with no means of escape.
For many years, Alberto Arce was the only foreign correspondent in Tegucigalpa, Honduras’s beleaguered capital. He has seen first-hand the country’s descent into anarchy. InBlood Barrioshe shares his experiences in a series of gripping and atmospheric dispatches: from earnest conversations with narcos, taxi drivers, and soldiers, to exposés of state corruption and harrowing accounts of the aftermath of violence. Provocative, revelatory, and heart-rending,Blood Barriosshines a light on the suffering and stoicism of the Honduran people, and demands action from a complacent international community.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781786990495
ISBN-10: 1786990490
Pagini: 160
Ilustrații: 20 halftones
Dimensiuni: 127 x 197 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: ZED BOOKS
Colecția Zed Books
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1786990490
Pagini: 160
Ilustrații: 20 halftones
Dimensiuni: 127 x 197 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: ZED BOOKS
Colecția Zed Books
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Notă biografică
Alberto
Arcehas
been
an
Associated
Press
correspondent
in
Honduras
and
now
works
for
the
AP
bureau
in
Mexico
City.John
Washingtonis
a
journalist,
novelist,
and
translator.Daniela
Ugazis
a
translator
and
law
student
at
New
York
University.
Cuprins
Acknowledgements
Epigraph
Map: Routes of cocaine and violence in Honduras
Part I: Red Journalism
1. Inside the volcano
2. Crime beat Rookie
3. Night of the Chepos
4. Death of a Taxi Driver
5. Four Boards Strapped to the Back
Part II: The Curse of Geography
6. A Little Known War
7. Mosquito Coast
Part III: Houses, Coffins, and Graffiti
8. Refugee Camp
9. One Coffin, One Vote
10. Hallucinations
11. Night of the Fire
Part IV: The Police
12. An Assassin
13. Death Squads
14. Police Reform
15. El Tigre Bonilla, A Culture of Simulacrum
Part V: Storytellers
16. Journalists
17. The Politicians
18. Those Who Imagine
Epilogue: What Am I Doing in Honduras?
About the Author and Translators
About the Illustrator
Epigraph
Map: Routes of cocaine and violence in Honduras
Part I: Red Journalism
1. Inside the volcano
2. Crime beat Rookie
3. Night of the Chepos
4. Death of a Taxi Driver
5. Four Boards Strapped to the Back
Part II: The Curse of Geography
6. A Little Known War
7. Mosquito Coast
Part III: Houses, Coffins, and Graffiti
8. Refugee Camp
9. One Coffin, One Vote
10. Hallucinations
11. Night of the Fire
Part IV: The Police
12. An Assassin
13. Death Squads
14. Police Reform
15. El Tigre Bonilla, A Culture of Simulacrum
Part V: Storytellers
16. Journalists
17. The Politicians
18. Those Who Imagine
Epilogue: What Am I Doing in Honduras?
About the Author and Translators
About the Illustrator
Recenzii
“No
other
writer
has
ever
got
this
close
to
Honduras’s
violence
and
survived.”
“Arce
is
morbid.
He’s
an
artist.
He’s
looking
for
something,
for
the
bigger
picture.
.
.
.
A
brave,
memorable
book.”
“Arce
provides
a
captivating
and
comprehensive
introduction
to
this
region,
too
often
ignored
by
the
outside
world.”
“Reminiscent
ofThe
Wire.Blood
Barriosis
full
of
perceptive
vignettes,
each
of
which
shows
how
cocaine
trafficking,
and
the
war
on
the
traffickers,
have
sent
the
country
spiraling
into
the
abyss.
Arce's
tone
is
that
of
a
journalist
teetering
on
the
brink
of
despair.”
‘It
takes
a
true
reporter—gutsy,
bloody-minded,
driven—to
work
the
streets
of
Tegucigalpa.
Alberto
Arce’s
ballsy,
bravely-told
account
marks
him
out
as
the
real
deal.
The
world
needs
more
reporters
like
Arce,
who
meet
bullets
with
ink,
head
on.
This
is
a
troubling,
gritty,
brutally
truthful
book.”
“Arce
is
a
kickass
reporter.
He
writes
with
a
searing
honesty
and
an
eye
for
detail
that
makesBlood
Barriosas
terrifying
as
it
is
impossible
to
put
down.”