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Amexica: War Along the Borderline Kindle Edition

4.2 out of 5 stars 96 ratings

Amexica is the harrowing story of the extraordinary terror unfolding along the U.S.-Mexico border—"a country in its own right, which belongs to both the United States and Mexico, yet neither"—as the narco-war escalates to a fever pitch there.

In 2009, after reporting from the border for many years, Ed Vulliamy traveled the frontier from the Pacific coast to the Gulf of Mexico, from Tijuana to Matamoros, a journey through a kaleidoscopic landscape of corruption and all-out civil war, but also of beauty and joy and resilience. He describes in revelatory detail how the narco gangs work; the smuggling of people, weapons, and drugs back and forth across the border; middle-class flight from Mexico and an American celebrity culture that is feeding the violence; the interrelated economies of drugs and the maquiladora factories; the ruthless, systematic murder of young women in Ciudad Juarez. Heroes, villains, and victims—the brave and rogue police, priests, women, and journalists fighting the violence; the gangs and their freelance killers; the dead and the devastated—all come to life in this singular book.

Amexica takes us far beyond today's headlines. It is a street-level portrait, by turns horrific and sublime, of a place and people in a time of war as much as of the war itself.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

This engrossing travelogue traces the fraught Mexican-American border, where the collision of affluence and poverty is mediated by an ultraviolent narco-traficante culture. Vulliamy (Seasons in Hell) journeys from Tijuana, where the ruthless Arellano Félix Organization cartel battles rivals, to the Atlantic coast, where the even more ruthless Zetas cartel, armed with grenades and rocket launchers, battles the Mexican army and besieges whole cities. In the middle is Juárez, the world's most violent town, an anarchy of contending cartels, street gangs, and their police and military allies, where massacres, beheadings, and grisly sex murders are routine. Vulliamy's border isn't all drugs and killings; it's also narco-corrida songs that celebrate drugs and killings, the American gun industry that feeds off drug money and enables the killings, and a presiding quasi-Catholic cult of Santíssima Muerte (holiest death). The author's take isn't entirely coherent. Sometimes the border is the problem, an artificial rupture that provokes turf battles over prime smuggling sites; sometimes, presented less persuasively, the lawless border is just a symptom of global capitalism, like the desperate illegal immigrants and exploited maquiladora workers (in foreign-owned low-wage factories along the border) he profiles. Although not especially deep, Vulliamy's is a vivid, disturbing dispatch from a very wild frontier.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Journalist Vulliamy has long reported on life along the border between the U.S. and Mexico, writing about international trucking, sweatshop factories, and illegal immigration. In this compelling book, he brings together the economic and cultural factors that have led to escalating violence along the border in territory that seems not to be under the control of either government. Traveling the frontier from the Pacific coast to the Gulf of Mexico, he interviewed drug dealers, law enforcers, and ordinary citizens caught in the gory violence and material excess surrounding narco-trafficking. Glorified in narcocorrido music and American film, drug traffickers are now involved in smuggling illegal immigrants, charging taxes to coyotes and ransom to families of immigrants kidnapped once they cross the border. He chronicles startling violence from a “soupmaker” who dissolves dead bodies in lye and acid to young traffickers who worship a culture of death that combines Catholicism and pre-Columbian faiths. Vulliamy examines the tough Arizona anti-immigration law and other immigration policies that are only now beginning to recognize that narco-trafficking can no longer be seen as the problem and responsibility of Mexico alone. --Vanessa Bush

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B003VTZSKE
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Farrar, Straus and Giroux; Revised edition (October 26, 2010)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ October 26, 2010
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 2.8 MB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 422 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.2 out of 5 stars 96 ratings

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4.2 out of 5 stars
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2010
    Written by an accalimed British journalist living in Arizona and London, Amexica is a comprehensive, historical, current and honest tale which was informed by a physical and scholarly journey along the entire Mexican-American border which, in many ways, is a culture unto itself: part of two countries but not fully belonging to either.

    It is part social traveloque, part keen observation, part critical attempt to understand complex issues, part interviews and reflection, part documentation of systemic corruption and public executions, mutilations, barbarism, decline and hope. It is mostly superior jopurnmalism: crisply written and extremely informative. Current drug policies have created atrocity and this erodes what we used to call "civilization", replacing it with fear and silence. War is more than a metaphor and like all work that attempts to address this, it deserves the attention and serious reflection that is sadly mission from the nightly news. There are compelling issues and findings on all of the border cities and a damning critique of the simplifications that define conventional wisdom.

    A fine bibliography guides the reader to serious work being done on the borderlands. If you can only read one book on these issues, this should be the one. Perhaps, someday a Mexican journalist or scholar will actually be free enough to write the sequal and those north of the border will awaken from the illusion that military technology and hardware, fences, and ideology can ever solve more problems than they create and magnify. We owe that to the children who live on the border who, after all, ought to shock us into being more responsible than we currently are. People who live there already know that. It is the rest of us who need to do our homework as it is our fantasies and priorities that govern their realities, and thus reveal our supreme ignorance of what lies behind the famed "invisible hand" of classical economics gone global: a black sun. This secular version of the Antichrist emerges when a society looses its moorings and the social fabric unravels. Shadow is confused for substance, and crude materialism for something of value. Fear trumps reason. Silence trumps inquiry and myths are reified, compounding ignorance. Not many journalists, hoever, are often mistaken for philosophers and scholars--additions reasons to read this vital book.
    7 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2010
    Amexica is a sobering look at what is going on along the U.S.-Mexico border that is, according to the author, "a country in its own right that belongs to both the United States and Mexico, yet neither."

    Vulliamy is a journalist who has reported from the border for many years but in 2009 traveled it from the Pacific coast to the Gulf of Mexico. Amexica is the result of what he discovered, telling in detail how the drug cartels work and what effect that has on both the Mexican people and Americans who live on the border or travel into Mexico. As the author writes, "this is not a history with a beginning, middle, and end; it is a slice of very recent, unfinished history."

    Parts of this book are sometimes hard to read as Vulliamy writes in graphic detail of the horrors of life along the strip of land that is now a very real war zone from Tijuana to Juarez, but the details are important to understanding the whole story. Mixed in with the these facts that most of us would rather be in denial about are also heroic stories of those who are fighting the evil. Whether heroes or villans, the book puts real names and faces to the drama that unfolds every day that most of us who don't live in the region would never know about.

    I decided to read this book because I wanted to know what was behind the headlines over the immigration debate, the steps states like Arizona are taking to protect their borders, and why the territory has become such a dangerous place. Amexica answered a lot of those questions for me. I was glad to discover that it wasn't written from a specific political leaning, nor did it preach to the reader about the morality or immorality of immigration reform. The author did a good job presenting the facts in a way that held my interest.

    I was given a copy of this book by the publishers but the opinion of it is mine alone and wasn't solicited. If I didn't like it I would say so.
    4 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2012
    After reading this book, you'll think Ed Vulliamy must be one of the bravest men on the planet. He's also one of the most observant, and very effective at putting his observations down on paper. "Amexica" breaks the border controversies of illegal immigration and drug smuggling into understandable human responses to the grinding poverty that still plagues Mexico and much of Central and South America. Vulliamy's narratives of the feared and ruthless Zetas, the cult of Sainta Muerte, the exploited factory workers, and the road weary Mexican truckers speak of the real Mexico --- not the stereotyped Mexico of the old Italian westerns or the narco-dramas of today. If you want to know what living in a Mexican border town is really like, and what people have to do to survive there, read "Amexica". It's a stark vision of reality that you won't forget.
  • Reviewed in the United States on October 10, 2015
    Well written, and compelling from the first page, this book gives the reader an eye opening experience as it examines the cultural and socio-economic impact of the cartels, maquiladoras, the cruel cycle of crushing poverty, and illegal immigration from the viewpoint of Amexica - what the author defines as 50 miles on each side of the borderline from the Gulf of Mexico to the Pacific Ocean.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on December 15, 2010
    The idea of reading a good,well written and expert book about the melt-down going on in Mexico over drugs appealed to me.

    Sadly, it was just an idea: this book reads like a first draft dashed off in an airport or Starbucks. It is

    virtually unreadable. The old axiom applies: easy writing makes for wretched reading.
    8 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on October 2, 2013
    I really enjoy these types of books. Describe in much detail what happens along the border, as most tend to be oblivious.

Top reviews from other countries

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  • Tom
    5.0 out of 5 stars America
    Reviewed in Canada on April 7, 2013
    I found this book both informative and scarey ,as we travel on I 10 every year on our way to phoenix.It makes you watch where you fill up with gas,and campgrounds that you stay in.Arizona is a wonderful place to visit as long as you realize the violence that is there.
  • Tom
    5.0 out of 5 stars Amexica
    Reviewed in Germany on January 24, 2012
    Amexica ist ein unglaubliches Buch, an dem keiner vorbei kommt, der sich für den Drogenkrieg in Mexiko, bzw. zwischen Mexiko und Amerika, interessiert. Viele True crime Bücher wiederholen sich ab der Mitte immer und immer wieder, sind langweilig oder schlecht geschrieben. Aber Amexica ist das komplette Gegenteil. Durch Dialoge von Opfern, Zeugen und anderen, ist das Buch flüssig zu lesen.
    Es ist unheimlich informativ. Die Kapitel sind sehr unterschiedlich, handel von einer Entzugsklinik, Waffenschiebern, Ciudad Juarez und dem scheinbar aussichtslosen Kampf gegen die Drogenkartelle. Reporter, welche darüber berichten, werden entführt oder umgebracht. Die meisten Polizisten gehen kaum ihrer Arbeit nach und die Armee ist hilflos, weil es zu viele Informanten für die Kartelle gibt.
    Bei den Geschichten kann man nur immer wieder den Kopf schütteln. Amexica macht Lust auf weitere Bücher dieser Art. So erschreckend sie auch sein mögen.
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  • Mr. D Burin
    5.0 out of 5 stars Ciudad's cartels, Juarez's junkies, and El Paso's exiles
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 26, 2011
    A wonderful piece of investigative journalism, Ed Vuillamy's `Amexica' creates a complex and nuanced portrait of the US-Mexican border, and deals in depth with both its troubles, and the attempts at community and at improvement which exist in these communities often ravaged by drug addiction, violence and poverty (especially, though not exclusively, on the Mexican side). Vuillamy interviews a number of important figures, from the exhausted, exploited Mexican truck drivers of `Ventesies' (a truck-stop and major meeting point for Mexico's truckers), to those working with the domestically abused, and with both local officials, and ordinary citizens living amongst the terror and anarchy of cities like Ciudad Juarez. Vuillamy also integrates newspaper stories, tales of `narcocorridos' (folk songs about the drug runners and cartels), and histories of both the towns and cities he visits, and how and why the drug trade boomed in those areas; and what legacies that led to. Viewing the war as `post-political', with both the police and the armed forces often involved in partnerships with the Cartels; Vuillamy also puts forward alarming and fascinating arguments as to why the drugs war is borne out of macho posturing, envy of women finding work, the want to own the best cars and clothes, and other such issues; theories backed up by the comments of local workers like Esther Chavez, who elucidates fantastically the reasons for the murders of the maquiladoras (factory girls) across Mexico's borderline.

    Vuillamy also explores the American side, though in a little less detail, focusing on the illegal flow of guns from the US, to the Mexican cartels (guns being illegal in Mexico), and the high calibre of weapons, like AK-47s, which the Cartels possess. Combined with this, is Vuillamy's wonderful lyrical style, which evokes the rolling sands of Arizona in which illegal migrants struggle to travel through, the charged, buzzing energy of community and of danger in Tijuana and Ciudad Juarez, and the old folk myths of Mexico, and it's `Virgin of Guadalupe', permeating the areas of the old Rio Grande, as it flows endlessly between the borderlands. Despite this wealth of skill and information however, the book has a few minor flaws; though nothing so off-putting as to stop the book being hugely enjoyable. Firstly, Vuillamy fails to get any interview with people currently involved in the drugs trade (besides a very brief chat with a few small-level dealers), and whilst it's unreasonable to expect him to be having a cappucino with Zeta leaders; it would have been nice to have some input from those involved in the trade at some level. Secondly, the book loses a little momentum towards the end - and Vuillamy pads out the information on old Mexican traditions of religion and society a little too much, and seems to lose sight of the main issues which underpin his investigative work.

    These are just minor qualms though, in comparison to the wealth of quality in Vuillamy's `Amexica'. An academic and informative, but highly readable account of the issues which affect the borderline and threaten to spiral out of control; all in the midst of brave, honest people trying to get on with their lives, and earn a living either in Mexico, or by emigrating North illegally. One of the best investigative books of the last decade, I urge anyone interested in crime and society, or just looking for an invigorating read in general, to read Ed Vuillamy's `Amexica'.
  • Callum Jones
    4.0 out of 5 stars Political agenda but good read nonetheless
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 7, 2021
    Very decent read especially the updated version. Problem is as always with books these days, it’s a political agenda driven book for the author to moan about their views. Whether you are pro immigration or anti, can we have just have books that aren’t driven by a certain agenda to fit your needs? Absolutely sick of it these days.
  • thomas
    5.0 out of 5 stars A passionate author
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 17, 2015
    Very well written and researched, right from the beginning it is very clear how passionate the author is about the subject.

    I enjoy reading true crime and have found this book to be amongst the best regarding insight into the complicated politics and situation in Mexico as the government and the US war on drugs.

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