Chalino Sanchez was a migrant worker who became a underground singer of narcocorridos -- ballads about drug smugglers - until his murder, which remains unsolved. Then he became a legend.
Two traveling salesmen plied their wares in a sweltering small town. The next day they were hanging from the town's bandstand lynched by a mob, a thousand strong.
Hailed as a cult classic, True Tales From Another Mexico takes us to a colony of drag queens -- jotos -- preparing for Mexico's oldest gay beauty contest.
We see how a bunch of humble rancheros invented the Michoacana popsicle, and a business model that poor people used to grow rich.
We follow a Oaxacan Indian basketball team in Los Angeles as its coach fights to restore the purity of his sport, besmirched in America.
Aristeo Prado was a gunfighter and robber -- a valiente trying to escape his past -- when he was ambushed on a noontime street and died going for his gun.
Telenovelas, once a propaganda vehicle of Mexico's one-party state, flourished with political change and touched topics -- corruption, drug trafficking and poverty -- that once were prohibited.
In Nueva Jerusalen, a theocratic village run by an excommunicated Catholic priest, residents receive voting instructions from the Virgin of Guadalupe.
We enter the Bronx - the rude boys in the PRI wing of Mexico's Congress -- as they struggle with the meaning of rebellion.
Some of these stories are strange and exotic. More often, though, they are from mainstream though ignored parts of Mexican life.
True Tales from Another Mexico are the stories of people whose stories never get told.
Sam Quinones is a long-time journalist and author of 3 books of narrative nonfiction.
He worked for the LA Times for 10 years. He spent 10 years before that as a freelance journalist in Mexico.
His first book is True Tales from Another Mexico: The Lynch Mob, the Popsicle Kings, Chalino and the Bronx, published in 2001, a collection of nonfiction stories about drag queens, popsicle-makers, Oaxacan basketball players, telenovela stars, gunmen, migrants, and slain narco-balladeer, Chalino Sanchez.
In 2007, he published Antonio's Gun and Delfino's Dream: True Tales of Mexican Migration. In this volume he tells stories of the Henry Ford of velvet painting, opera singers in Tijuana, the Tomato King of Jerez, Zacatecas, the stories of a young construction worker heading north, and Quinones' own encounter with the narco-Mennonites of Chihuahua.
His third book was released in 2015. Dreamland: the True Tale of America's Opiate Epidemic recounts twin tales of drug market in the 21st Century. A pharmaceutical company markets its new painkiller as "virtually nonaddictive" just as heroin traffickers from a small town in Mexico devise a system of selling heroin retail, like pizza. The result is the beginning of America's latest drug scourge, and the resurgence of heroin across the country.
The book has received rave reviews in Salon.com, Christian Science Monitor, Wall Street Journal, American Conservative, Kirkus Review, and National Public Radio.
Amazon readers gave Dreamland 4.7 stars and called it "a masterpiece" and "a thriller."
"I couldn't put it down," said one. Said another: "This book tells one of the most important stories of our time."
Following Antonio's Gun, the San Francisco Chronicle called Quinones "the most original American writer on Mexico and the border out there."
He has done numerous Skype sessions with book groups that have chosen his books to read.
For several years, he has given writing workshops called Tell Your True Tale. Most recently the workshops have taken place at East Los Angeles Public Library, from which have emerged three volumes of true stories by new authors from the community.
Great view of often unseen parts of Mexico and Hispanic life in the US. What's the story about all those Oaxacan basketball teams in LA and how did narcocorridos become so popular? A couple of the great stories by a now LA Times writer and reporter. Highly recommended -- and I know Sam but that wouldn't change my recommendation.
Of course because of when it was written, some of the terms and framings feel a bit outdated. Overall, however, the essays are vividly written and precise. As a fellow journalist, I was astounded by how deeply Sam was able to report the most remote parts of Mexico, especially in an era where Mexico was still stereotyped by their northern neighbors.
The best part of this book are the people Sam meets. He quotes and describes them without opinion or sugar-coating, often resulting in surprising and funny lines that are revealing of Mexican politics at the time and brings the reader close to the story. So few nonfiction today achieves this, often gutting humorous bits to save the reader a few minutes of their shortened attention span; I wonder if this has to do with the healthy ecosystem of alt newspapers at the time.
As a U.S. citizen I also enjoyed reading this book for the chapters in which he tied Mexican migration and the U.S. by telling us unexpected stories; for example, the obsession rural Oaxacans have with basketball and their tournaments in Souther California, or the returned "gangsters" who innocently aim to mimic the romanticized violence they claimed to witness across the border. The rich number of characters in each essay helped the book avoid most stereotypes and simplifications, though of course I'm sure there are still some and, again, I'm reading this from an outsiders perspective.
I read this for book club, and we agreed that not only was this thoroughly enjoyable, but as ex-pats living in Mexico for varied amounts of time, this book helped us understand (with a grain of salt) so much of other Mexican modern media and conversations and politics we've been exposed to. That in itself is the goal of non-fiction, I hope. It was also trippy to read some current politics in the book and to see how it turns out today. (Read: Vicente Fox).
This is a book that inspires me to write and report better. Love! Wish this had a larger circulation. Excited to read Sam's other books.
The content was great, very great glimpses into small groups of people throughout Mexico that paints an overall picture of the socioeconomic conditions of some of Mexico at the time. I do however think that the journalistic aspect/exoticism of the place and people described rubbed me the wrong way. It sort of fell into this orientalism-esque trap and didn't give much credit to the agency of the individual people -- rather it spewed out polemical and general statements about Mexico, its people, government without justifying them.
There was a lot of potential to dive deeper into some of the stories, agency of the people/individuals but this book was not that. Instead it unfortunately held up some bad stereotypes and generalizations that seemed unfounded. Not to say there wasn't great snapshots of individuals and their histories and their lives, but the way it was presented and analyzed certainly fell into some sketchy stereotypes
Best book I’ve read on Mexico ever, I think. Premise is that in order to truly understand the officialist Mexico as molded by the 20th Century PRI, one must understand those confined to the outskirts of the society the PRI created. So Quiñones tells The stories of outcasts, miscreants, the unlucky, unpopular or downright insane. A lot of these essays feel like long drafts of LA Times articles that he wrote and that got cut to fit the print edition. But his cheeky yet detached voice is there, and the lessons are still highly applicable to the Mexico of today.
This book was a title I saw while shopping for something else on Amazon. The subject intrigued me and so I bought it for myself. This book offers some interesting insight into a complex subject. We don't often get to see this side of Mexico portrayed in media so I had to read more. It is made up of short stories so it is easy to read. I recommend it to anyone who is interested in the subject.
Great balance of informative and entertaining (at least for someone who knew very little about Mexico - but I suspect you'd still enjoy it if you were more familiar). Really enjoyed reading this.
A very fine resources for trying to understand the workings of Mexican society from the ground up. I just wish I could find a similar contemporary text. 20 years makes this a bit dated, but it's also weird to read about the beginnings of NAFTA (and the end of the Bracero program) just now when Trump is gunning for the treaty and giving Mexico so much grief. I'll be reading more Quinones, for sure, he is an excellent researcher, reporter, and writer.
I've now read both of Sam Quinones books and wish there were more - especially one current to 2012. I'd encourage anyone interested in understanding Mexico at a deeper level to read these books. I'll paste in two comments from newspapers that summarize much better than I'd be able to why these books are so good: - L.A. Times Book Review said “over the last 15 years, he has filed the best dispatches about Mexican migration and its effects on the United States and Mexico, bar none.” and - San Francisco Chronicle Book Review "Geniunely original work, what great fiction and nonfiction aspire to be, these are stories that stop time, and remind us how great reading is."
This is a book of several stories about life in Mexico.. the society.. and the people, the government and the hopes and dreams as well as the poverty, sadness, and religious life of the people.. It was a good book, teaching me more about the country other then the typical drugs, smuggling, etc.. Took a long time to read, as my eyes are going bad and I need an operation.. This is not good for a person like me, who loves and lives to read!!
Reading this right now. Its informative, and the author employs a tight, but humorous writing style that includes his own ideas so that you have a decent idea of where he is coming from. I particularly like how he ties in Mexico's current effects on Southern California. It adds dimension to the local scenery.
This book painted a whole new side of Mexico I had never known about or considered before. It imagines a different Mexico, the seeds of which are sown in this story, while also bringing up and examining the issues of why this new Mexico has not broken free yet. A very good, informative read for anyone interested in Mexico's quirky underpinnings.
Sam Quiñones is a journalist, and each of these short pieces reflects that - quick glances into worlds that most of us white Americans never imagine. Politics, telenovelas, drug smugglers, indigenous basketball leages, drag queens...fascinating.
both of sam quinones books True Tales and Antonio's Gun and Delfino's Dream are must reading to start to understand the immigrant experience and mexico.
After reading the well-researched (if at times uneven) Dreamland, I was rather curious to read more of Quinones' work, and this fit the bill real well. Stories from backwater Mexico, and from the places where backwater Mexicans wound up north of the border, singing narcocorridos and playing basketball according to the rules of the Zapotec mountain villages, and how that contrasts with the platform put forth by the official PRI government. He's a bit too enamored of Vicente Fox, but other than that, it's exceptionally told.