God's Middle Finger: Into the Lawless Heart of the Sierra Madre
by Richard Grant
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Read in April, 2008
recommends it for:
guys who like guns and readers who like edgy travel writing.
This is an engrossing, depressing gross-out of a book, and my feelings about it are wildly dissonant. In brief, it relates the author's travels in Mexico's Sierra Madre mountain range, an extremely large, rugged, and dangerous place, much of it bereft of any rule of law (unless the convenience of drug lords can be called that). The people who live there have such punishing lives that their grasp of reality has been twisted out of true and much of their magical thinking abets their misery. Everyo...more
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Read in February, 2008
A strangely fascinating story of a journalist who decided to head down the Mexico's Sierra Madre region in spite of the fact that everyone told him he'd definitely get himself killed there. And he nearly did.
I found this book interesting for two reasons.. first of all, I had no idea exactly how wild the Sierra Madre was. After reading this, I think I'd rather be dropped naked in Baghdad than in the middle of Sinaloa. I've read a number of books on Mexico and it's narco-culture, but never f...more
I found this book interesting for two reasons.. first of all, I had no idea exactly how wild the Sierra Madre was. After reading this, I think I'd rather be dropped naked in Baghdad than in the middle of Sinaloa. I've read a number of books on Mexico and it's narco-culture, but never f...more
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Read in March, 2008
I believe a quote from the author will suffice:
"I drove out of the mountains and then north across the plains and deserts and I didn't stop driving for fifteen hours until I was within striking distance of the U.S. border. I was ready to write about celebrity bathroom fixtures for a living, designer footwear, what your window treatments say about you. Some other fool could go into Sinaloa. I never wanted to set foot in the Sierra Madre again. The mean drunken hillbillies who lived u...more
"I drove out of the mountains and then north across the plains and deserts and I didn't stop driving for fifteen hours until I was within striking distance of the U.S. border. I was ready to write about celebrity bathroom fixtures for a living, designer footwear, what your window treatments say about you. Some other fool could go into Sinaloa. I never wanted to set foot in the Sierra Madre again. The mean drunken hillbillies who lived u...more
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Read in May, 2008
Excellent travel account of a trip through the lawless Sierra Madre region of Mexico. Never knew the level of lawlessness existed this close to the border, although you often hear tales of Mexican drug lords and the murder of young women by the coyotes (immigration smugglers). Life is really cheap here. Slams machisomo. Still, he meets a lot of helpful and nice people. And it sounds as if it would be a wonderful experience for backpackers and hikers, if they could somehow preserve the natural ar...more
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Read in March, 2008
WOW! I really had no idea about the Sierra Madre, what it was like there and how lawless and crazy it really is.
This book was so good, I'm going to have to go out and read everything Richard Grant has written. I really couldn't put it down.
Every little detail of every little town he was in was truly fascinating (at least to me anyways). I want to hear more about the Sierra Madra; however, I think to get any deeper, you would probably have to die.
This book was so good, I'm going to have to go out and read everything Richard Grant has written. I really couldn't put it down.
Every little detail of every little town he was in was truly fascinating (at least to me anyways). I want to hear more about the Sierra Madra; however, I think to get any deeper, you would probably have to die.
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This book was great. I was expecting just ridiculous travel tales and outlandish stories- which are abundant by the way; however it is just as much of a study in regional culture and customs. Drug kingpins, outlandish gauchos (Mexican cowboys), lost tribes of native cultures, violence, poverty, religous juxtapositions of drug dealers and assasains who go to shrines of the Virgin to have their cargo and bullets blessed- this book has it all.
The only reason I did not give it 5 stars was tha...more
The only reason I did not give it 5 stars was tha...more
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Read in April, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Read in April, 2008
I've been devouring this picaresque tale of life and death in Mexico's Sierra Madre mountains, which is as rough and crazy as anything you can imagine. Injecting millions from the sale of marijuana, heroin and cocaine into a macho culture already saturated with revenge killings and clannish feuds and you get an epochal train wreck. It's funny when it isn't horrifying.
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Read in April, 2008
I was surprised I liked this one so much (I originally purchased it for my husband). I learned a lot about the Sierra Madre region in Mexico ("narco" lifestyle, the bizarre lawless law that governs there), the most important thing I learned, tho, is that I will never ever plan a trip there...
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Read in February, 2008
"So this is how it feels to be hunted." That's the opening line of one of the more gripping opening first chapters I've read in a long time. After Grant describes how his solo journey into the Sierra Madre nearly comes to a very ugly end, how could you not want to know more?
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The best travel books are about places it'd be just foolish to go to, and this is one. The author takes you into the heart of the still lawless and deadly Sierra Madre. It's hard to believe life is like this somewhere, which makes the book hard to put down.
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Read in April, 2008
An extremely informative book about the drug culture of MExico. It is a book that reminded me of Traffic, and focused on Mexico.
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Read in March, 2008
Excellent tale of a writer pressing his luck exploring places he is not so welcomed in. Fun to read.
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Read in March, 2008
It's interesting so far, but not all that insightful. I'll keep going, though.
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Wednesday, March 12, 2008, at 7:30pm at the Boulder Book Store.
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fucking awesome...so far. If Rayne can enjoy it, anyone can!
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Read in March, 2008
Quite possibly one of the best travel books ever written.
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