The Way That Leads Among the Lost: Life, Death, and Hope in Mexico City's Anexos

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Product Details
Price
$29.00  $26.97
Publisher
Farrar Straus and Giroux
Publish Date
Pages
272
Dimensions
6.31 X 9.22 X 0.99 inches | 0.97 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780374605780

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About the Author
Angela Garcia is an anthropologist and writer. Her first book The Pastoral Clinic: Addiction and Dispossession Along the Rio Grande received the Victor Turner Prize for Ethnographic Writing and the Pen Center USA Award for Exceptional First Book. Angela was born in New Mexico and now lives in San Francisco with her two children.
Reviews

"An investigation of Mexico's makeshift drug rehab centers for the poor, Garcia's book combines anthropological field work with personal history, delivering an unvarnished chronicle of desperate patients, brutal treatment regimes and her own struggles with depression and a traumatic past." --The New York Times (Editors' Choice)

"A stunning portrait . . . Spending days embedded inside the crowded single rooms that comprise most anexos, [Garcia] transcribes residents' evocative life stories. Startlingly, her journey eventually brings her to the U.S. . . . Garcia's narrative is fueled by an insatiable curiosity about the unique ethos of anexos, which sometimes seem to serve as spiritual retreats from a world gone haywire. It's a luminous, immersive account of an unseen social safety net." --Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"[An] astute and harrowing chronicle . . . [Garcia's] approach is studied and intimate as she mixes memoir and academic rigor to enter the traumas of lives uprooted and too often shattered by addiction . . . Given ongoing arguments over immigration, drug use, and legalization, Garcia's outstanding book adds compassion and insight to this important social and political discussion." --Booklist (starred review)

"This probing book raises ethical questions about the use of violence as a rehabilitative tool. It also illuminates the role of the U.S. in perpetuating human suffering through military aid, illegally trafficked guns, and its insatiable hunger for drugs while immersing readers in Garcia's own struggle to overcome the demons of a painful past. An engaging and insightful book." --Kirkus Reviews

"Angela Garcia is a card-carrying anthropologist and ethnographer yet her writing reads like the best of literary nonfiction. The world she describes is close at hand and yet most of us would be fearful to get anywhere near, let alone embed ourselves within it. An utterly fascinating story." --Abraham Verghese, author of The Covenant of Water

"A true book can be many things, but it's always a book no one else can write. This is a true book about love, the politics of abandonment, and addiction. Angela Garcia takes us through the wreckage of the war on drugs, revealing what this manufactured brutality now creates. That she maps the latticework of care of the anexos so carefully, as patiently as she comes into understanding her own quest, is not only one of the book's many achievements, but also an act of grace." --Adrian Nicole LeBlanc, author of Random Family

"The Way That Leads Among the Lost is an emotionally vivid and beautiful book about pain, violence and love, and the impossible choices that face parents in desperate settings. Like the best anthropology, it opens a window into a hidden world and makes it feel alive." --Tanya Luhrmann, professor of anthropology at Stanford University

"In this remarkable ethnography, Angela Garcia illuminates the hidden world of Mexico's 'anexos, ' informal treatment centers where teenagers from poor families are often sent against their will by parents who are unable to care for them. Condemned as torture centers by human rights groups, Garcia shows that anexos are often the only place to which mothers can turn to protect their children from the violence of Mexico's drug wars. Her gracefully written, sharply observed study is a model of empathy that movingly captures the dignity and humanity of 'anexados' and their families." --Eyal Press, author of Dirty Work

"An extraordinary exploration, personal and anthropological, of the impossibly murky boundaries between protecting children, walling them off from the dangers of the world, and abandoning them. Garcia is so gifted that she can turn a history of a small dim room in Mexico City into an examination of both her life and a generation." --Rachel Aviv, author of Strangers to Ourselves

"Angela Garcia's participant ethnography The Way That Leads Among the Lost: Life, Death, and Hope in Mexico City's Anexos is an exploration of and testament to the lengths to which women, mostly mothers, go to try to keep themselves and those they love safe from violence. As she situates the anexos (spaces of last resort that are part jail, part lay clinic) as complex responses to Mexican and US state violence, the 'war on drugs, ' and governments' failures to ameliorate tremendous suffering, Garcia's braided narratives handles the stories of these women and the anexados with care. Attending to the conditions that produce those proliferating anexos--The Way That Leads Among the Lost is a profound grappling with the ethics, forms, and practices of care in the midst of unrelenting violence." --Christina Sharpe, author of Ordinary Notes

"In The Way That Leads Among the Lost, Angela Garcia dives deep into the makeshift rehabilitation centers around Mexico City that embody a paradox: Often used to shield vulnerable family members from the violence of the country's failed drug war, the spaces employ brutal and often abusive tactics on their residents. As Garcia undertakes an extensive, open-hearted study of what some of Mexico's most marginalized people do to try to heal after they've been abandoned by the state, she looks inward at her own personal history of abandonment and loss. What results is an excruciatingly intimate look at pain and catharsis. This book blew me away." --Roxanna Asgarian, author of We Were Once a Family

"The Way That Leads Among the Lost is a searing ethnography of the violence experienced by poor mothers in Mexico City's war on drugs as they struggle to protect their children by committing them to lay treatment centers that use violence as care. It is also a searching autobiography of Angela Garcia's own existential struggle with the violence of poverty, drugs, broken family, and abandonment. The two stories merge into what is more than a tragedy of our time, but a personal victory for Garcia's caregiving to rebuild her world. Powerful, compelling, deeply affecting: a courageous account of what has become all too ordinary social suffering and the extraordinary work in the ambiguous grey zone of life to repair broken worlds." --Arthur Kleinman, The Soul of Care