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[OE1]∎ [PDF] Gratis The Interior Circuit A Mexico City Chronicle (Audible Audio Edition) Francisco Goldman Thom Rivera Audible Studios Books

The Interior Circuit A Mexico City Chronicle (Audible Audio Edition) Francisco Goldman Thom Rivera Audible Studios Books



Download As PDF : The Interior Circuit A Mexico City Chronicle (Audible Audio Edition) Francisco Goldman Thom Rivera Audible Studios Books

Download PDF  The Interior Circuit A Mexico City Chronicle (Audible Audio Edition) Francisco Goldman Thom Rivera Audible Studios Books

Coming off the most successful book of a decorated career - Say Her Name - The Interior Circuit is Francisco Goldman's timely and provocative journey into the heart of Mexico City. The Interior Circuit is Goldman's story of his emergence from grief five years after his wife's death, symbolized by his attempt to overcome his fear of driving in the city. Embracing the DF (Mexico City) as his home, Goldman explores and celebrates the city, which stands defiantly apart from so many of the social ills and violence wracking Mexico. This is the chronicle of an awakening, both personal and political, "interior" and "exterior", to the meaning and responsibilities of home. Mexico's narco war rages on and, with the restoration of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (the PRI) to power in the summer's 2012 elections, the DF's special apartness seems threatened. In the summer of 2013, when Mexican organized crime violence and death erupts in the city in an unprecedented way, Goldman sets out to try to understand the menacing challenges the city now faces.

By turns exuberant, poetic, reportorial, philosophic, and urgent, The Interior Circuit fuses a personal journey to an account of one of the world's most remarkable and often misunderstood cities.


The Interior Circuit A Mexico City Chronicle (Audible Audio Edition) Francisco Goldman Thom Rivera Audible Studios Books

It's very well written but I made the mistake of ordering the narrated Audible version during a 10 hour road trip with my wife, and 2/3 of the book deals with death, corruption (on every law enforcement level), violence, kidnapping, assault, mugging, rape and every atrocity imaginable. I was seduced by the free audible 'sample' which seemed to focus on culture, rituals, traditions, and by the time we got half way through my wife (in the car with me) was horrified and doesn't want to come to Mexico City with me anymore. I'm sure its all true, but it was so dark, hopeless, and depressing. Would have been nice to add some happy endings for relief here and there.

Product details

  • Audible Audiobook
  • Listening Length 11 hours and 55 minutes
  • Program Type Audiobook
  • Version Unabridged
  • Publisher Audible Studios
  • Audible.com Release Date December 9, 2014
  • Whispersync for Voice Ready
  • Language English, English
  • ASIN B00QSFY2IM

Read  The Interior Circuit A Mexico City Chronicle (Audible Audio Edition) Francisco Goldman Thom Rivera Audible Studios Books

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The Interior Circuit A Mexico City Chronicle (Audible Audio Edition) Francisco Goldman Thom Rivera Audible Studios Books Reviews


Insightful, credible and entertaining.
I am still reading the book and having great satisfaction. I read equally English and Spanish, so when I figured out that Goldman had written it in English, I went for it. Nevertheless, given the subject, it might read even better in Spanish, if the translation is good.

That said, Goildman's writing is brilliant. His language is rich and it reads without a hickup. A cover comment claims that it took a foreigner to write such a wonderful book on such an amazing, contradictory and fascinating city. But Goldman isn't really a foreigner, like many of us who have lived there for a long time. I'm emotionally tied to Mexico City, and drove around like any local. Granted, I learned to drive in S. America and only now, at my Golden Age, do I drive automatic. Other than the driving part (it's hard, granted and gotten worse), I can resonate with much of Goldman's experiences.

I found it difficult to underand that when he got into #somos132 for such a long part of the book (not that it isn't an essential), there were some severe editor's oversights and that he fell for Camila Vallejo's "ravishing beauty" to the extent he did. Camila is, no doubt, an important figure in Latin America's student movements, but as in many things, they are better understood with a little more distance, time-wise.

And never forget a key sentence "If you think you understand Mexican politcs/social system/organization, it's because you are lacking information".

Anyway, I believe it's an essential reading for anyone interested in Mexico. You won't regret it.
I fell into the trance of just simple interest based on the Mr. Goldman's extensive writing skills. Before reading the book, I had very little interest in Mexico City, and had a basic belief, stated by one of the people cited in the book, that it was a super polluted massive violent mess. Instead, through Mr. Goldman, I discovered a vibrant the creative class in Mexico City that challenges the belief that Miami is the capital of Latin America. I learned about where they lived, what they were accomplishing, and the fact that their ties to Paris seemed much stronger than their ties to the United States. Mr. Goldman also vividly describes the unsavory character of the Mexican upper class. The second half of the book deals with Mr. Goldman's investigation into a kidnapping outside a club in Mexico City's most popular and generally safe club district, and the results of his investigation lead to interesting conclusions about the drug cartels, their relationship with Mexico outside its capital, and their close relationship to the Mexican government. Mr. Goldman is in love with Mexico City, and considers it his spititual and domestic base, but the reader is left with an impression that it is a City that is growing increasingly corrupt and increasingly unsafe. All in all, I found the book an incredibly readabel eye-opener about a city I had never before taken the time to explore.
Excellent book! I live in mexico and I am quite informed about the situation here but this book filled in a lot of gaps. Also some eye opening info about Jamiaca, Brazil, El Salvador and Honduras. Very well researched and readable!
I was expecting a sort of travel story. However, it became a riveting and well written exposition of how one's world changes when the government turns from "let's pool our money to more efficiently help us all" to seeing citizens as targets to be fleeced for individual gain. Scary! And timely!
A fascinating window into Mexico City politics and the impact of violence on its citizens cerca 2013-15, and a must-read for those who are traveling to Mexico City, for the insights into its civil society, neighborhoods, and the demi-monde of intellectuals and artists as well. Some of the personal tale was funny as well as tragic and/or neurotic and convoluted, like the "interior Circuit" after which this book is named.
It was certainly full of information and I loved the author's personal stories. But it felt like he was desperate to break the "bubble" of the idea of safe and comfortable Mexico City. Those who have visited or live here know it's not safe, and we know there is violence and degradation both here and in the rest of the country. We know its corrupt, we know there are divers seemingly insurmountable problems.. But we can also see its beauty, its lovable weirdness, its comforting chaos. There were small glimpses of the DF that I know in this book, but only very small ones, and I was very disappointed. I did, however, learn a lot about the city's political history, and while the author and his circle obviously run much more to the left than I, I appreciated getting to hear a different point of view.
It's very well written but I made the mistake of ordering the narrated Audible version during a 10 hour road trip with my wife, and 2/3 of the book deals with death, corruption (on every law enforcement level), violence, kidnapping, assault, mugging, rape and every atrocity imaginable. I was seduced by the free audible 'sample' which seemed to focus on culture, rituals, traditions, and by the time we got half way through my wife (in the car with me) was horrified and doesn't want to come to Mexico City with me anymore. I'm sure its all true, but it was so dark, hopeless, and depressing. Would have been nice to add some happy endings for relief here and there.
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