John Gibler

I Couldn't Even Imagine That They Would Kill Us

Notify me when the book’s added
To read this book, upload an EPUB or FB2 file to Bookmate. How do I upload a book?
Gibler's is the first and only book available in English that is based on extensive interviews with survivors of the September 2014 killings and abductions of students in Iguala, Mexico. It is a peerless expose of the crimes and the official cover up. The only other book available in English on the subject («The Iguala 43: The Truth and Challenge of Mexico's Disappeared Students» (Semiotext(e) – February 3, 2017) is, according to Gibler, based on Web searches and conjecture: the writer never once set foot in Ayotzinapa nor spoke with a single survivor or relative of the disappeared.
Gibler is an internationally recognized authority on the Ayotzinapa attacks and has been referenced with prestige by the New Yorker and NPR's All Things Considered.
«The journalists John Gibler (the author of the book “To Die in Mexico”) and Marcela Turati have provided the most complete reports of what happened in Iguala on the night of September 26th.» — Francisco Goldman in his New Yorker essay.
NPR's All Things Considered reporter Arun Rath says, “Gibler has interviewed more than a dozen survivors and witnesses. He's pieced together the most detailed account yet of what happened that night.”
This book is currently unavailable
272 printed pages
Original publication
2017
Publication year
2017
Have you already read it? How did you like it?
👍👎

Impressions

  • Alejandra Carrilloshared an impression6 years ago
    👍Worth reading
    💀Spooky
    💡Learnt A Lot
    💧Soppy

Quotes

  • Ana Bernardinohas quoted6 years ago
    10. I have explored this analysis in “Without Terror, There Is No Business,” NACLA Report on the Americas, Vol. 48, No. 2, Summer 2016, pp. 135–138, and “Las economías del terror,” in Jorge Regalado, ed., Pensamiento crítico, cosmovisiones, y epistemol
  • Ana Bernardinohas quoted6 years ago
    Those officials, including the lawyers, detectives, and politicians, have been torturing—literally, torturing—the families of the disappeared daily from September 27, 2014, to the present day. E
  • Ana Bernardinohas quoted6 years ago
    While the police use guns, patrol vehicles, roads, radios, mobile phones, and other tools to disappear people, the legal administrators of forced disappearance employ computers, the mass media, government office space, public funds, laboratories, maps, graphs, texts and all manner of legal documents to do the same
fb2epub
Drag & drop your files (not more than 5 at once)