This is a book about one of the deadliest places in the world
Óscar Martínez writes for ElFaro.net, the first online newspaper in Latin America. His first book, The Beast, was named one of the best books of the year by the Economist and the Financial Times. In 2008, Martínez won the Fernando Benítez National Journalism Prize in Mexico, and in 2009, he was awarded the Human Rights Prize at the José Simeón Cañas Central American University in El Salvador.
Martínez dives into the underworld of his subjects, navigating
barrios that police won't enter, spending days and nights with gang
members. His methods resemble war reporting and his prose is
cinematic . The collection's strength lies in his ability to write
the hell out of his material. Like Katherine Boo's Behind the
Beautiful Forevers and Adrian Nicole LeBlanc's Random Family, it
skimps on statistics and analysis, instead relying on description
alone to create a world that captures the reader and doesn't let
her go. One of the stories, 'El Niño Hollywood's Death Foretold,'
evokes Gabriel García Márquez's Chronicle of a Death Foretold. Like
the beloved Colombian writer, Martínez pens scenes that are
suspenseful, moving, and vivid.
*New Republic*
Martínez's credentials for writing about this ignored human tide
are impeccable: his first book, The Beast, drew on eight trips
clinging to the roof of the infamous migrants' train through
Mexico, chronicling their desperation in grippingly graphic detail.
His new book, A History of Violence, takes a step back to explore
what the migrants heading to the US are running away from . the
unflinching cameos it paints offer a chilling portrait of
corruption, unimaginable brutality and impunity.
*Financial Times*
Ripped from the headlines, these are powerful stories of Central
America's chaotic and bloody present, sure to raise awareness among
a broad audience of North Americans, whom Martínez refuses to let
off the hook. 'The solution?' he asks. 'It's up to you.'
*Library Journal*
In Spanish, the tradition of the crónica is in-depth testimonial
reportage blended with personal essay, and Martínez is a worthy
inheritor. Martínez's work conveys an intimate knowledge of the
social and criminal ecosystem-both macro-level context and telling
minutiae. But because he isn't afraid to follow dangerous paths,
the result are jewels with moments of intense emotion presented
against a historical background that contemplates military, social,
economic, religious, psychological and all sorts of other factors .
I am in awe of Martínez's commanding style.
*In These Times*
Agonizing stories . [Martínez] urges readers to understand what
Central Americans are going through and what compels them to seek
refuge in the United States.
*El Paso Times*
Dives deep to the problems driving the region's violence and
impunity . If The Beast was a look at the dangers of the journey, A
History of Violence focuses on why people take it to begin
with.
*PRI’s The World*
No place is dangerous enough to quell Martínez's hunger for the
truth, as the intrepid newshound sniffs around in occupied prisons,
grim police stations, hellish whorehouses, desolate crack dens,
isolated ranches and battered barrios, all the locales omitted from
the tourism brochures. To understand how corruption operates in
Central America, Martínez goes to where it operates . gritty
journalism.
*Latino Rebels*
Reading Salvadoran journalist Óscar Martínez's nonfiction portrait
of violence in Central America, it seems fantastically lucky for
all of us that he's still alive . The reporting is an act of
courage; the book is a plea for comprehension of the terror that
drives people from Central America to the United States .
Martínez's portrait of Central America as killing field is a plea
not only for comprehension of immigrants' race for the border but
also for empathy.
*Texas Observer*
If you take just one book to Central America on holiday, don't pick
this one. Oscar Martinez has written a punishing account of the
lives of the poor in Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador. Melding
acuity and anger, he unveils the scary realities of organised crime
. Mr Martinez deserves credit for bringing it so effectively to
life.
*Economist*
Martínez is a gifted storyteller with an astute, observant eye and
a voice that beckons to be followed . A History of Violence is a
necessary read, especially for US government officials crafting
immigration policy against migrants and refugees from the region.
It sheds light on why so many are braving the treacherous trek
through Mexico to reach the United States.
*Los Angeles Review of Books*
As the current wave of US Immigration and Customs raids authorised
by President Obama deports Latino migrants, and Donald Trump boosts
his election campaign with promises to build a wall along the
US-Mexican border, Martínez endeavours to explain why, for many
Central Americans of the northern triangle, returning home is a
death sentence.
*Independent*
El Salvador's best chronicler of this profound crisis is Óscar
Martínez, a journalist based in San Salvador. Martínez has
dedicated his career to documenting how the matrix of poverty,
instability, and narcotrafficking has transformed the lives and
prospects of Central Americans. As a writer, he's a committed,
old-school social realist, and traveled with migrants on their
deadly northward route for his previous book about Central American
migration, The Beast. His methods in A History of Violence: Living
and Dying in Central America are equally painstaking.
*The New Inquiry*
Martínez draws readers into this complex narrative by alternating
between a panoramic social sweep and the beleaguered lives of
civilians, victims, gang members, and cops, capturing the
multilayered nature of a place whose indigenous traditions are
being brutalized by modern criminals who commit murder casually .
Smart, angry immersive journalism from an author who warrants wider
readership on this side of the border.
*Kirkus*
Martínez tenaciously reports piece by piece on the accretion of
gang-related violence besetting El Salvador, Honduras, and
Guatemala . Martínez's reporting reveals shocking failures of the
state-particularly of police and courts-but he avoids tidy lessons,
preferring to let the intractable issues stand in all their cold
brutality.
*Publishers Weekly*
A History of Violence . stays close to the lives of gang members,
victims of violence, and the quixotic public officials who try to
offer some answers in El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala .
Martínez avoids the literature's usual magnification of criminals'
power and pays attention to the fluid alliances and personal
relations that determine, as one Honduran intelligence office puts
it, 'who's in charge now.'
*Public Books*
A haunting portrait of a tragic, complicated part of the world.
*Shelf Awareness*
In this collection, Martinez, a journalist whose acerbic prose
enlivens its dire subjects, covers stories that illuminate why so
many Central Americans are willing to risk their lives to cross the
border to the United States (and why, instead of calling them
illegal or undocumented, we should be calling them refugees).
*The Millions*
A History of Violence is not simply about storytelling, and despite
the gruesome subject matter, is certainly not sensationalist
journalism . Óscar Martínez is a passionately engaged reporter who
goes under the surface to get to the truth.
*TeleSur*
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