Nicola Tallant is an Irish investigative journalist focusing on organised crime networks.
Her third book, Cocaine Cowboys, follows the growth of cocaine supply and demand in Ireland. It is a gripping, if rather unnerving, tale of a white gold rush and the cowboys who created a Wild West style frontier both here and abroad while becoming multi-millionaires in the process. This is a story of money, misery and murder.
Ireland has the highest usage of cocaine in the European Union, according to the European Drug Report 2023. But why? Well, conceivably, it seems to have a cool image - a party drug with perceived few ill effects (you’d think differently after spending a shift or two in A&E!) - far distant from the total shame attached to the heroin that had blighted underprivileged areas before.
In an interview with Pat Kenny, Tallant notes that middle-class people are very particular about “where their avocado comes from”, but “when it comes to cocaine, they don't know, and they don’t care”. The average user doesn't seem to see the link between them buying a line of coke and funding the criminal activities (violent feuds, witness intimidation, money laundering and kidnapping, to name but a few) and the lifestyles of these gang members - and I don't mean the children, yes children, who are being groomed and radicalised into the gangs ready to take the fall for their masters.
Tallant’s journalistic finesse is evident in the amount of detail she weaves in this tapestry of characters from the OCG drug lords down to the impoverished growers and drug mules and often grim stories of Ireland's own Narcos. 4⭐
Many thanks to @eriubooks for sending me an advance copy; this, as always, is an honest review.