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Adan Gongora is the National Security Secretary; a tiny slip of a man, the extent of his cruelty belies the shortness of his stature. In a country weighed down by massive corruption, his goal is to end the chaos. Gongora's clean-up methods are horrifying: the incompetent are eliminated, the innocent locked behind bars or assassinated.
One day, Gongora invites Gorozpe to run for the magistrature. But Gorozpe knows that it is time to get rid of, or at least neutralize, Gongora. So, how does one proceed when faced with an adversary of this caliber? How does a person stop the current that seems to be dragging the country directly to the drain?
208 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2009
In any case, he went on, mimicry is inevitable in literature and, after all, to choose one’s mentors well is a sign of talent.
A surgeon cannot make a mistake: if he operates for appendicitis on a man with a toothache, his license is revoked. A lawyer, on the other hand, can lie in the sense that he knows his arguments are based on a fallacy that is useful to win a case, to deceive a fool, or to confuse an enemy.
Now it is not the revolutionaries who are coming. The ones who are coming are the criminals, the drug traffickers, the whores who accompany them, the bodyguards, and as usual, the government officials with Swiss bank accounts of unknown origin.