Loyal Soldiers in the Cocaine Kingdom

Tales of Drugs, Mules, and Gunmen

Alfred Molano author James Graham translator

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Columbia University Press

Published:19th Mar '04

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Loyal Soldiers in the Cocaine Kingdom cover

Alfred Molano reveals the lives of the couriers who transport drugs from Colombia into the United States and Europe. Colombians from many different backgrounds tell the story of how they became involved in smuggling, forced to find a way out of poverty in the middle of an unending civil war.

Loyal Soldiers in the Cocaine Kingdom opens a window on a rarely glimpsed world: the couriers who transport drugs from Colombia into the United States and Europe. Written by one of Colombia's leading writers, the book lets English-speaking readers get a good look-for the first time-at the people behind the drug trade. Colombians from many different backgrounds and parts of the country tell the story of how they got involved in smuggling and how some of them managed to get out alive. This book is about the predicament in which ordinary Colombians find themselves, forced to find a way out of poverty in the middle of an unending civil war. Based on Alfred Molano's visits to Spanish and Latin American jails, Loyal Soldiers in the Cocaine Kingdom combines the gut-wrenching honesty of testimonial literature with the passionate storytelling we have come to expect from Latin America. In his native Colombia Molano has been compared to Gabriel Garcia Marquez, and indeed the many layered narratives in this book resemble harrowing fictions.

The major pleasure of this book lies in the sheer zest of its telling. Molano has an ear for magic-realist openings and pungent country wisdom. Minneapolis City Paper Molano's narratives are powerful arguments for a policy that addresses the poverty-and aspirations-of Colombia's citizens. -- Paul LaFarge Village Voice Literary Supplement

ISBN: 9780231129152

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

168 pages