I rarely read books on true crime, but since I've gotten into a reading funk because I'm tired of the same old story lines, I decided to try reading a completely different genre.
I have a hard time saying this was a "good" book. How can a book about real-life murder be "good?" I will say, however, that this book was fascinating, well researched, and incredibly disturbing.
Humes does an excellent job of remaining neutral narrating the events of the disturbing El Padrino murder rituals. While some of the descriptions can be graphic, I didn't feel they were overdone, or written simply for shock value.
The violence described was enough to show the depravity of a madman, but not so much that it read like some over-the-top gross-out horror flick. Humes did a good job of showing the decline of some of the cult members from normal to crazy (like Sara and Omar), to the downward spiral of the criminally insane to the psychopathic (like Adolfo and Duby).
But this book told more than just the story of the horrific murders of fifteen people in Mexico by the El Padrino cult. It described the effects of the drug trade on a small border town in Mexico and how someone like Adolfo Constanzo could rise to power. It explained why people could go missing and the police didn't seem to notice or care. It explained why people w
ould buy into El Padrino's strange brand of witchcraft. It explained the climate of fear that allowed Adolfo to run his cult so successfully for so many years. It explained how he was able to evade capture for as long as he did.
Humes took care to separate the perverted religion that Constanzo practiced from the true religions like Santeria, Palo Mayombe, and witchcraft - pointing out the differences in the "black" and "white" magics that are practiced in these beliefs. What Constanzo's crew practiced was a religion of his own making. What it spawned was a tidal wave of panic and speculation of widespread satanic cult activities throughout Mexico and Texas. I liked how Humes pointed out the differences between Costanzo's religion and the true religious practices, making a point to state that the result of El Padrino's work was mass hysteria and misunderstanding.
This book was well researched and well written, but probably not for everyone. For those not able to stomach the horrors that some "humans" can inflict on others - steer clear of this book. Otherwise, it is a fascinating, yet gruesome look into a world that 99.9% of us will (thank goodness) never understand.