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Killing Pablo: The Hunt for the Richest, Most Powerful Criminal in History | 
enlarge | Author: Mark Bowden Publisher: Atlantic Books Category: Book
List Price: £7.99 Buy New: £4.54 You Save: £3.45 (43%)
New (8) Used (5) from £1.99
Rating: 16 reviews Sales Rank: 57960
Media: Paperback Pages: 384 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 6.9 x 4.3 x 1.1
ISBN: 1843546515 EAN: 9781843546511 ASIN: 1843546515
Publication Date: May 10, 2007 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: BRAND NEW - ***Delivery usually * 2 - 3 * working days - From Aphrohead of SOUTHPORT, Lancs, UK *** . Priority Airmail used Worldwide on International orders. Thanks from all at Aphrohead.
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Amazon.co.uk Review Killing Pablo, Mark Bowden's intoxicating account of the turbulent life of Colombian drug baron Pablo Escobar and his inevitable demise, relates in riveting detail the cataclysmic effect one man can have on the world economy. Finally tracked down and killed in 1992 after a 15-month intense manhunt that had resulted in hundreds of casualties on both sides, Escobar was, ironically, that archetypal American hero, the outlaw, siding with "ordinary people" against the ruling oligarchy (although at his peak Forbes magazine listed him as the seventh-richest person in the world). His break came when the American drug of choice changed from dope to cocaine, a golden, or perhaps powdered, egg exploited by Escobar with resourceful manipulation of officials and politicians--he would offer the classic choice of his silver or his lead. Even when incarcerated at La Catedral prison on a smuggling charge, he turned it into a state within a state. The guards, the army and the police all fell within his pay and he led his operation with a quiet, well-mannered ruthlessness. Until, that is, the Americans took an interest. Bowden is well-equipped to describe the drawn-out campaign by the intelligence services to assassinate Escobar, having already covered similar territory in the superb Black Hawk Down, which chronicled the disastrous 1993 American operation in Mogadishu. His descriptions of the electronic surveillance that finally ensnared the hounded Don and the shady mutual interests of civilian militia group Los Pepes, the Colombian government forces and the US Delta unit that wore him down, are taut, dramatic and deeply thrilling. While he stops short of claiming that the Americans were present or active in the killing, he admits that Delta knew roughly where Escobar was and were dismissive of the electronic wizardry, pointing out that Escobar was eventually spotted by the naked eye. Though Escobar died, the circumstances he seized upon would be harder to expunge. The troubling, concluding lines of Brecht's The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui come to mind, referring to a character based on Al Capone and Hitler but who could have been Escobar, "The bastard son is dead but the bitch is still on heat". --David Vincent
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| Customer Reviews: Read 11 more reviews...
You couldn't make it up. April 30, 2008 J. Duducu (Ruislip) This is tightly written and compelling thriller which just happens to be true. Putting Pablo Escobar into the wider context of Columbian history helps explain not only how he can justify his activities but why he was so beloved by so many people. The overall arc of the war (and that's no exaggeration) between Pablo and the Columbian state is gripping stuff. It's also interesting how so many common people were willing to believe his lies. However it's the incidental details that really bring things to life, the interviewees asked to recount key moments mean they are told with crystal clarity. Not all of them are vital to the narrative but they add a whole new understanding of Pablo himself, an example would be his extremely infantile attitude to women. The stand out story there being getting naked models to race to a sports car- first one to get there keeps the car! Only too much money and power leads to that sort of degradation. This is a fascinating account of how to deal with the chimera of drugs in society and how there are no simple answers to anything in Colombia.
Fabulous! January 3, 2008 T. Ball (liverpool uk) I bought this book when I was going on holiday and I couldn't put it down-absolutely unbelieveable how this man lived his life. A book I'm sure I'll read time and time again!
very good read December 2, 2007 Paul J. Fitzgerald This is a very good read told at a brisk pace. I came away feeling that Pablo was a bit of a tragic figure, with plenty of bad as well as plenty of good in him, mixed in with a very heavy dose of ambition fueling his rise to the top of the drug world. For all of the bad things Pablo seems to have done, I found it very sad and even tragic to see him hunted down and shot to death in the end. Colonel Martinez, Pablo's nemesis, comes across as an interesting and strong person who you also care about. As some critics have noted, perhaps the book should have been written by a Colombian, who would have greater familiarity with the subject matter, but Bowden seems to have done a very good and objective job of telling the story. Author of Adjust Your Brain: A Practical Theory for Maximizing Mental Health.
Well researched but somewhat lacking November 15, 2007 Mr. C. Mansell (London) This is a decent read for anyone with an interest of how US forces operated in South and Central America around the time this book relates to. I found myself becoming bored with the superlatives used to describe the US spying techniques and yearning for greater insight into how Pablo and the cartel were adapting and still avoiding capture. A well researched and insightful book just occaisionally lacking in detail with regards to Pablo himself.
well researched March 11, 2007 J. Mellor (Manchester, UK) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is a biography of the life of drug king Pablo Escobar. The writer has clearly got some inside story as to his life as it is very detailed (probably too detailed regarding his early life which does drag on far too long). However, if you stick with it, it does give a fantastic insight into Pablo's early years, what formed him and Columbia's recent history. It also describes the Colombian and US Govts attempts to bring him to justice and the time he spent in prison which was more of a five start hotel, run by his staff and even the prison guards were on his payroll. It also exposes the illegal, covert US operation (and the manipulation of several US laws) to bring Escobar to book, culminating in his assassination on 1992. Escobar comes across as a very intelligent man, bit of a modern day Robin Hood to some extent and you are rooting for him at times until you realise the death and destruction he brought to the world. A well researched book that is certainly worth a read.
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