What to
say about this book? Well firstly I should explain how I approached it. I had
never read a Don Winslow before but when I saw that James Ellroy was calling
this the “War and Peace of Dope War books” I knew I had to finally turn my
attention to this stalwart of American crime fiction. The Cartel is a sequel;
it follows on from an earlier novel, The Power of the Dog. So what to do? As with many of the books I
read, I borrowed The Cartel from the good people of NetGalley and they expected
their review.
Well I
bit the bullet and shelled out for The Power of the Dog and read the two back
to back.
And Wow.
Just Wow.
I’ve
heard it said that Ellroy is a sucker for hyperbole but I have to say that here
he might just be spot on. The Power of the Dog and The Cartel are both
marvellous achievements that any writer should be proud of. To be clear, you
don’t have to have read the earlier book to read The Cartel, the latter can be
read as a standalone, but reading it after the first magnifies the pleasure.
The two
books are like a macabre soap opera, and I mean that in a good way; scrap that,
I mean it in a great way. Adan Barrera is the narcoboss while DEA agent Art
Keller is his foil. Barrera is sophisticated, charming, if not a little of the
accountant. As with the Godfather there are others around him who are brasher,
seemingly tougher. But just as Al Pacino’s character inevitably floats to the
top in the movies based on the Mario Puzio novel, so does Barrera here. He’s
just smarter than the others, more cunning. Keller on the other hand becomes
increasingly bitter and isolated as the man he originally considered a friend
escapes his grasp; his marriage fails, he becomes an isolated loner, a man
obsessed.
I should
stop here to say that I’m doing Don Winslow a disservice, someone reading this
review could be forgiven for assuming these characters are crime fiction clichés,
but nothing could be further from the truth. Winslow carries this all off with
guile, perhaps borne from real anger. It’s clear from the pages that he deeply
cares about the mess that Mexico has become and while he never preaches or
allows his voice to intrude into the narrative, his research is painfully
obvious. The descriptions of the atrocities carried out by the various factions
are chilling, while Barrera is destined perhaps to become one of literature’s
great monsters; no cardboard cut-out Hannibal Lector, more akin to the banality
of evil that’s somehow more frightening. While on occasion he is present during
horrendous acts of violence, more often he’s in the background, giving the
orders. Many times while reading the book I was reminded of that infamous
description Hannah Arendt penned for Eichman. There are numerous other
characters, all vividly drawn. One of my favourites is a boy who enters The
Cartel in the second half, who is moulded into a cold-blooded killer, first by
the ZETAS and then a religious cult-like cartel, until he’s a hollowed out
shell of a human being. Despite the fact that he’s a relatively minor
character, Winslow has you completely occupying his soul in the passages where
he features.
This is
a long book and if you read it back to the back with The Power of the Dog,
we’re talking almost a thousand pages. But it is so worth it. A blistering and
angry read, it will completely change the way you think about the War on Drugs,
drugs in general, and even the skewed relationship between the countries of the
rich northern Hemisphere and their southern neighbours.
A glowing 5 out of 5 stars
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