🎉   Please check out our new website over at books-etc.com.

Seller
Your price
£14.99
Out of Stock

Hello, Shadowlands

Inside the Meth Fiefdoms, Rebel Hideouts and Bomb-Scarred Party Towns of Southeast Asia

By (author) Patrick Winn
Format: Paperback / softback
Publisher: Icon Books, Duxford, United Kingdom
Published: 7th Jun 2018
Dimensions: w 102mm h 200mm d 13mm
Weight: 500g
ISBN-10: 1785783475
ISBN-13: 9781785783470
Barcode No: 9781785783470
Trade or Institutional customer? Contact us about large order quotes.
Synopsis
'Reads like a thriller you can't put down' Megha Rajagopalan, China Bureau Chief, Buzzfeed News 'ensures you'll never think about Southeast Asia in the same way ever again.' Geographical Magazine Essential to understanding Southeast Asia in the 21st century, Hello, Shadowlands reveals a booming underworld of organised crime across a region in flux- a $100 billion trade that deals in narcotics, animals and people -and the staggering human toll that is being steadily ignored by the West. From Myanmar's anarchic hills to the swamplands of Vietnam, jihadis are being pitted against brothel workers, pet thieves against vigilantes and meth barons against Christian vice squads. Hello, Shadowlands takes a deep plunge into crime rings both large and small. It also examines how China's rise and America's decline is creating new opportunities for transnational syndicates to thrive. Focusing on human stories on both sides of this crime wave, the acclaimed Bangkok-based broadcaster and journalist Patrick Winn intimately profiles the men and women of the region who are forced to make agonizing choices in the absence of law.

New & Used

Seller Information Condition Price
-New
Out of Stock

What Reviewers Are Saying

Submit your review
Newspapers & Magazines
Brilliantly crafted and thrilling to read. This is a page turner with soul - an evocative tour through places that are too often ignored.' * Tom Vitale, director of Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown * Avoiding both sensationalism and moralizing, Patrick Winn takes his reader with somber elegance into Southeast Asia's criminal underworld - and from more interesting perspectives than the usual drug dealers and traffickers. Here is a world as rich, contradictory and strange as any that one could think of.' * Lawrence Osborne, author of Beautiful Animals and Bangkok Days * In Hello, Shadowlands, Patrick Winn writes in a vibrant, readable style, uses years of hardcore field reporting and adds thought-provoking analysis to expose a side of global crime that we all need to better understand. His vivid descriptions take you deep into surreal and at times heartbreaking worlds but he also steps away to give wider meaning to these tales and their place in the economic and political systems. Anyone who wants to make sense of the dark side of modern global capitalism needs to read it.' * Ioan Grillo, author of El Narco and Gangster Warlords * Through a gripping narrative, Patrick Winn takes the reader on first-hand tour of Southeast Asia's underworld - from the meth dens of Myanmar's rugged Kachin State to Manila's fetid slums where Duterte's drug war has killed thousands, all the way to Central Vietnam where village mobs have murdered drug-addicted dog meat thieves. As Southeast Asia's villages empty and its cities swell, the region seems caught in a bitter struggle between the powerful syndicates who control the $31 billion methamphetamine traffic and desperate citizen vigilantes who are determined to break the drug's grip by any means necessary. Through vivid character portraits and deft anecdotes, Winn offers the reader an intimate, indelible portrait of a major world region in the throes of serious social change.' * Alfred W. McCoy, author of The Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity in the Global Drug Trade * Drawing on a decade of on-the-ground reporting in Southeast Asia, Patrick Winn gives us a rare window into the subterranean depths of the region's $100 billion organized crime underworld. Winn takes us from the narco-empires of Myanmar's war-torn north to the slums of Manila, where crime rings peddle phony birth control elixirs to desperate young women. Hello, Shadowlands is a sweeping work of investigative journalism that reads like a thriller you can't put down. Winn's reporting on the men and women who run the region's underworld is both sensitive and incisive. He demonstrates how the breakneck economic growth that has lifted so many fortunes in Southeast Asia has also set the stage for a new golden age of drug trafficking - aided by corruption, despotism and the absence of law. Hello, Shadowlands is a quintessential read for anyone who wants to understand the dark side of Southeast Asia's economic gains.' * Megha Rajagopalan, China bureau chief, Buzzfeed News * Not inappropriately billed as Fear and Loathing meets McMafia, this is a compelling expose of Southeast Asia's criminal underworld, and the dark underbelly of some popular holiday destinations by an award-winning US journalist resident in Thailand. Reporting from Myanmar, the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam, he tells the often deeply moving human stories behind the organized crime and corruption rife in the region, whether it be the massive trade in candy-colored meth, or hostesses trained by the North Korean regime. I found the chapters on Myanmar particularly illuminating in the light of recent headlines about that troubled country.' * The Bookseller * So addictive that it has me chasing down everything else he has written .... It's hard to say what is more potent in Hello, Shadowlands: Winn's rich characterisation, his canny reportage or the way his interrogation of the past illuminates 21st-century Southeast Asia and its criminal networks.' * South China Morning Post * Winn's journalistic skills remain firmly in charge throughout ... an intelligent and timely glimpse into a region of the world rapidly growing in importance, and ensures you'll never think about Southeast Asia in the same way ever again.' * Geographical * Great Read....It's a fascinating piece of journalism and Winn makes sure the subjects of his interviews and the overarching political, cultural and sometimes religious atmosphere they live under take the spotlight.' * Belfast Telegraph *