Review
A journalistic masterpiece . . . One of the most remarkable pieces of narrative nonfiction I have read in a long, long time -- David Remnick - New Yorker
Powerful...Evangelista makes us feel the fear and grief that she felt as she chronicled what Duterte was doing to her country. But appealing to our emotions is only part of it; what makes this book so striking is that she wants us to think about what happened, too. - New York Times
An extraordinary book...not just a documentation of the drug war, but a history of the Philippines; an account of what brought Duterte to power; and a rumination on what it is like to be a journalist covering brutal atrocities -- Sally Hayden - Irish Times
Tragic, elegant, vital . . . Evangelista risked her life to tell this story -- Tara Westover, #1 Sunday Times bestselling author of EDUCATED
In this blindingly ambitious, unfathomably brave, fiercely reported book, Patricia Evangelista exposes the evil in her country with perfect clarity fueled by profound rage, her narrative voice at once utterly brutal and terrifyingly vulnerable. In short, clear sentences packed with faithfully recorded details, she reveals the nature of unbridled cruelty with an insightfulness that I have not encountered since the work of Hannah Arendt...Few of history's grimmest chapters have had the fortune to be narrated by such a withering, ironic, witty, devastatingly brilliant observer. You may think you are inured to shock, but this book is an exploding bomb that will damage you anew, making you wiser as it does so -- Andrew Solomon, National Book Award–winning author of FAR FROM THE TREE
In this haunting work of memoir and reportage, Patricia Evangelista both describes the origins of autocratic rule in the Philippines, and explains its universal significance. The cynicism of voters, the opportunism of Filipino politicians, the appeal of brutality and violence to both groups - all of this will be familiar to readers, wherever they are from -- Anne Applebaum, Pu