Lina Britto does an excellent job on Colombia's first narcotics trafficking boom. She explores how this crop changed the social structure of the Magdalena Grande through a concise and masterfully written analysis of the background, rise and fall of the first business of its kind in Colombia. As a Colombian, I never imagined the extent of the weed trade in my country, which, blessed with natural wealth, is capable of producing, apparently, the best illicitly classified crops in the world. From this book I would like to emphasize four points:
1. The role that the United States played in the whole cycle of the Boom story. From JFK's Peacecorps, the hippies, the traffickers who introduced technification and a whole productive and commercial apparatus around weed to the demonization of weed and the subsequent Colombian bloodbath caused by them.
2. The microclimate potential of the Sierra to create not only one but multiple export varieties of the herb that to this day are valued worldwide.
3. The close relationship of Vallenato with the marimberos and how they helped to consolidate a genre that is an icon and intangible heritage of humanity.
4. The evident commercial potential of this crop that can add not inconsiderable amounts to the public purse. And to find that the proposal is not new, the idea of legalizing hemp in Colombia comes from the 80s and by none other than the ANIF.
All in all, it is a book that makes me travel through lands of magical realism, coffee, vallenato, grass and contraband. And that gives us a different look, closer, more ours, more Colombian to a problem that still afflicts us but that as a country helps us to understand ourselves and our recent history.