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42 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent capsule history of the failed war on drugs,
By
This review is from: The Power of the Dog (Hardcover)
Don Winslow's latest book (after _California Fire and Life_), _The Power of the Dog_, is an epic look at the US war on drugs from its earliest beginnings to more recent times. The book is violent and thrilling and heart-breaking, as it follows a large cast of characters from the early 1970s through 2004, showing how the competing interests and agendas of various government agencies (the CIA, the DEA, etc.) get in the way of successfully combatting the problem, and often only served to make things much worse.
Art Keller, the book's protagonist, is a half-Hispanic DEA agent who grew up in the San Diego barrio and saw the effects of drugs on his friends and family firsthand. As a rookie agent, he makes the mistake of befriending Don Miguel Angel Barrera, one of the top Mexican policemen, in an effort to topple the reigning drug kingpin. Barrera proceeds to move into the subsequent power vacuum and sets up La Federaccion, a much more well-organized and deadly organization than previously existed, and run by his two nephews, the intelligent and sensitive Adan, and the flashy and violent Raul. This sets in motion a 30-year vendetta on Keller's part, as he attempts to take down the Barreras and atone for his mistake, a vendetta that will lead to the deaths of numerous innocent parties along the way, and to Keller's estrangement from his own wife and children. The book was a very fast-moving, though extremely violent novel. In a little over 500 pages, Winslow does an amazing job of encapsulating a lot of recent history, including the Camarena murder, the Iran-Contra scandal, and other related events, into a very readable and entertaining novel, one of the best I've read recently. If you're not too squeamish, I'd highly recommend the book.
32 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"A Farmer in the Fields of the Dead",
By Gary Griffiths (Los Altos Hills, CA United States) - See all my reviews (TOP 1000 REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Power of the Dog (Hardcover)
I find two varieties of five-star reads. Page-turners both, there are those that hit you like the best action movies - a quick rush, great fun while they last, a lightning shot of adrenaline - and all but forgotten a month or so down the road. And then there are the very special books that deliver all the thrills, the action, all the suspense while at the same searing an unshakable image in your soul that you know will stay with you for a very long time. Don Winslow's remarkable "Power of the Dog" is firmly in the latter camp.
Contemporary history buffs my remember US DEA Special Agent Enrique "Kiki" Camarena who, while assigned in Mexico in 1985, was abducted, tortured, and brutally murdered by Mexican drug lords. While Winslow changes the names, the events leading to and subsequent to Camarena's murder play a central role in this epic tale of the violence, corruption, love, betrayal, and vengeance surrounding three decades worth of the trafficking of cocaine and heroine by Mexican drug cartels. So grand in scope, so exhaustively researched, and so authoritative in its delivery of the facts, and comparisons or analogies are strained. But for a starter, consider a role up of "Traffic", "The Godfather", and "Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia". Winslow manages to demystify the shady politics and clandestine operations of Nicaragua and the Sandanistas and the Iran-Contra affair, the 1994 assassination of Mexican Presidential candidate Luis Colosio, NAFTA and others in enough detail to qualify as a docudrama, while the unspeakable brutality, depravity, and evil that travels alongside the drug trade is, well, plainly spoken. Winslow weaves tight story lines from Mexico's deserts and poppy fields to the Tijuana/San Diego borderland battlegrounds to New York City's Hell's Kitchen and Bensonhurst. His characters are much too real to be expected between the pages of pop fiction - all too believable in their flaws, weaknesses, vulnerabilities, and failures. In the end, it would not be giving anything away to say that the vaunted war on drugs is ultimately a war of futility. Drugs pour into the US in ever-greater quantities while drug lords get richer and the American taxpayer pours increasingly more money to fund corrupt politicians and dubious strategies. Notwithstanding, "The Power of the Dog" is a powerful and unapologetic tale of bitter fatalism, of redemption that rings ultimately hollow. If you are squeamish, or intend to keep naive delusions of our "noble" fight against drugs intact, this is probably not the book for you. But for what is bound to become a classic, plumbing the depths of evil in this dark history we'd probably all prefer to ignore, you simply must read this novel.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
takes hold like a pit bull,
By
This review is from: The Power of the Dog (Paperback)
Power of the dog grabs hold of you like a pit bull at your throat and will not let go .Well after you have read this book it lingers .News stories from the past decades fit like pieces of a puzzle. From the kidnapping and killing of a U.S DEA agent, to the shooting death of cardinal Ocampo in Mexico, to the shooting death of Mafia boss Paul Castellano.Not to mention the number of those whose lives seem go by unnoticed .The Power of the dog pulls you into a world you may rather not know of, one you will surely not forget .It is beautifully written compelling, full of insight, and it is relentless .I fear much contained within this book may not be truly fiction, but fictionalized.This book hits the spot for a page turner at 500 pages you will go through them very quickly .This book is violent, and You will feel the violence. This is not a stylized glamorous violance but true wicked and dirty. Winslow takes us someplace that will make us uncomfortable and we follow in quick step there is no let up and you are through the looking glass in no time.This is not glamour but grit and grit stays with you for a while it gets into all kinds of places .For the genre this may be the best book of its kind I have ever read.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Must Read,
By Bookslinger "eap641" (Washington, DC United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Power of the Dog (Hardcover)
There are some books, which leave a lasting impression on you. The kind that you start to miss before you are even done, and then when you finish, you can't read another for a while. This is that kind of book. The story follows a number of people caught up in the various sides of the Drug War, a DEA agent, coke traffickers call girl, mafiosos and a priest. The most compelling part of the story is the humanity of each character. This is not just another book with plot twists-it also makes you feel what each person is feeling. Recommend Highly
15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
(4.5) "Deliver my soul from the sword",
By Luan Gaines "luansos" (Dana Point, CA USA) - See all my reviews (TOP 500 REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: The Power of the Dog (Hardcover)
"El poder del perro"; The Power of the Dog. This novel delivers a healthy dose of reality, shadowing drug enforcement agencies, from the poppy fields of South America to the Mexican border. Laced with the politics of self-deception and political agendas, much goes unreported and unacknowledged as the US continues indefensible relationships with despots who perpetuate the violence of a drug-related economy.
Against this background, one figure traces the advances of the drug economy. Since Operation Condor in Sinaloa in 1975, Art Keller has been tracking the drug industry's recurring faces. A Company Man, Keller is one of the "lost, the lonely, the cultural misfits with a foot in two worlds and a place in neither, half-Anglo and Half-Mexican". North American fire power and munitions meet South American business-as-usual, a disheartening mix of military power in the hands of the politically untouchable who decimate the country's economy in pursuit of profit. Keller pursues one small corner of this world, but he does so doggedly, revealing the complicated infrastructure and government involvement along the US-Mexican border. Keller is infected with guilt; he once was duped by the man who is now a key player, Miguel Angel Barrera. But Keller handles most of his business outside of the purview of the government agencies, a lethal alphabet soup of DEA, FBI and ATF, all committed to keeping a lid on the current problems. Art believes all Third World slums are the same, "the same mud or dust, depending on climate or season, the same smells of charcoal stoves and open sewers...malnourished kids with distended bellies and big eyes". At least in Guadalajara, the middle class softens the edge between rich and poor. Not so in the South American countries, reduced to abject poverty and a tiny percentage of ultra-rich. South America is a killing ground, where the poor are slaughtered with impunity. Following the corruption endemic to the drug trade, from Operation Condor in Sinaloa in1975, Guadalajara in 1984, El Salvador in 1985, Mexico and NAFTA in 1992 through the late nineties, is like descending the levels of Hell, each more complicated and fraught with moral indictments, the exorbitant cost of the lesser of two evils, where moral ambiguity becomes the coin of the realm. Art Keller's personal journey, navigating this particular nightmare, illustrates how deeply flawed is the attempt to control illegal substances. This kind of fiction serves a dual purpose: it entertains and informs. While Winslow writes a fascinating fiction of drug trafficking and those it touches so intimately, he also exposes the agencies who have failed to control the uncontrollable, yielding a massacre of thousands in the name of profit, a system of bribery and corruption so endemic that each layer only reveals another, a mix of murderers and drug lords who act with impunity to protect a way of life. In a blistering indictment of the War on Drugs, American support of Third World guerillas financed by the illegal narcotics trade and the easy greed of officials who sell their accommodation to the highest bidder, Winslow spins a powerful yarn that is both informative and disturbing: "The hardest thing in the world isn't to refrain from committing an evil, it's to stand up and stop one." Luan Gaines/2005.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Winslow at His Best!,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Power of the Dog (Hardcover)
Don Winslow has been my favorite fiction author since I began reading as an adult (i.e., not assigned), and he has not disappointed me with this book. Unlike The Death and Life of Bobby Z. and California Fire & Life, The Power of the Dog takes a little more than the first five pages to pull a reader in, but it has wonderul character development, intensity that kept me turning pages, and one of the most brutal chapters of fiction I have ever read.
The story follows the career of DEA Agent and former CIA operative in Vietnam Art Keller. Keller's career with the DEA was made by a Mexican police officer, Tio Barrea, who later became a drug kingpin in Mexico, thanks largely and unknowingly to Keller eliminating his competition through his work with the DEA. When Kelly discovers how Tio has manipulated their relationship, he dedicates the rest of his career to bringing Tio down, at a huge cost to his personal and professional lives, and to the lives of those around him.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Best Novel I've Read This Year,
By Jim H. (Oakland CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Power of the Dog (Hardcover)
I hadn't heard of Don Winslow until recently, when I checked out Power Of The Dog from my local library. Wow! I can't believe Winslow hasn't been getting more critical acclaim. This guy is in the same league as James Ellroy and Michael Connelly. Power Of The Dog is an epic treatment of the war on drugs with a complexity of plot and character that is riveting. And Winslow has become a beautiful writer. Certainly a nominee for best novel of 2005.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Suspenseful and accurate,
By
This review is from: The Power of the Dog (Hardcover)
"The Power of the Dog" inspects three generations of Mexican drug lords and the psychology of those who oppose them. It's a book both about hopelessness and doing what you feel is right, regardless of the outcome. However, there's not much preaching -- written in a sparse style with excellent ending impact to each scene, it's a speeding trip through hell that reveals the corrupting force of politics, money, drugs, weapons and sex. The author has clearly done his research including the behind the scenes knowledge that never quite makes it into mainstream publications, and from it has spun a suspenseful and compelling yarn.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Join the Don Winslow Fan Club,
By
This review is from: The Power of the Dog (Paperback)
Power of the Dog packs the punch, twist, and edge everyone should be looking for out of a good Crime novel!
This was the first Don Winslow book I had read. Since devouring Power of the Dog I have read other Don Winslow novels and he has become one of my favorites! This book is for anyone who wants to get their heart pumping. Tough book to put down, missed my train stop twice. I have recomended this book to friends and they have paid it forward! Once you read this you will be back at Amazon.com to get other Winslow novels. (Try Winter of Frankie Machine, you'll love it too.)
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Gripping story, terrible spelling,
By
This review is from: The Power Of The Dog (Kindle Edition)
The plot is beautifully developed and I couldn't stop reading it!
However, I must say the Kindle edition has ample room for improvement. There were typos all over, and not one Spanish word was spelt right. Definitely not worth the money, I thought I was paying for an edited, published book, but the Kindle edition certainly is not. I haven't read any book by this author in paperback, so I can still hope those editions do not have the spelling issues. |
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The Power of the Dog by Don Winslow (Paperback - May 9, 2006)
$15.95 $13.09
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