Description
True stories from the cursed streets of Honduras, the country with the world's highest murder rate.
About the Author
Alberto Arce, joined the Associated Press (AP) in February 2012 as a correspondent in Honduras, where for several years he was the only foreign correspondent to report from Tegucigalpa. He later joined AP's Mexico City bureau and The New York Times. He is a 2018 Knight Wallace fellow at the University of Michigan. He won the 2012 Rory Peck award for features his coverage of the battle for Misrata during the Libyan civil war and several other awards in the United Sates for his coverage in Latin America and has also reported from Lebanon, Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, Venezuela, Gaza or Syria. This is his second book. He has also published Misrata Calling (2012). John Washington is a journalist, novelist, and translator. Daniela Ugaz is a translator and law student at New York University. They translated The Beast: Riding the Rails and Dodging Narcos on the Migrant Trail, by Oscar Martinez
Reviews
Alberto Arce writes with stunning power and pace. Under the most difficult circumstances, he tells stories from violence-torn Honduras with an authenticity that reveals to readers terrible realities and the victims, but with an elegance that suggests there are no false notes . . . [He is] a journalist who seems fearless. * American Society of News Editors *
AP reporter Alberto Arce chronicled Honduras' collapse into chaos in the aftermath of a coup in 2009. Arce's stories uncovered government-sanctioned death squads, human rights abuses in prisons and corruption among police and military forces. Overcoming a lack of public records available to him, Arce persuaded sources to give him copies of government documents and developed sources within the government, military, court systems and NGOs. He befriended prison officials and gang members alike to gain access to areas they controlled. Arce was eventually pulled out of Honduras after he was warned his reporting would get him killed. * Investigative Reporters and Editors (IRE) *
Arce is a kickass reporter. He writes with a searing honesty and an eye for detail that makes Blood Barrios as terrifying as it is impossible to put down. * Jon Lee Anderson, war correspondent for The New Yorker *
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. * Oliver Balch, author of Viva South America! A Journey through a Restless Continent *
It took courage for Arce to write what he did in such a lawless place - naming names. If he hadn't, a lot of us who pay attention to what is happening in a region that ought to be of concern to Norteamericanos just wouldn't know. * Tim Ferguson, Forbes and jury member for the Overseas Press Club Award *
Reminiscent of The Wire. Blood Barrios is 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. * Tom Feiling, author of Short Walks from Bogota: Journeys in the New Colombia *
A brave, memorable book. One always hopes the pen will prove to be mightier than the gun, or the machete or the line of coke. In Honduras, I fear, one hopes in vain. * William Leith, Spectator *
Book Information
ISBN 9781786990495
Author Alberto Arce
Format Paperback
Page Count 288
Imprint Zed Books Ltd
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Weight(grams) 274g