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Rogues patrick radden keefe review
Rogues patrick radden keefe review








rogues patrick radden keefe review

Tragically, Bourdain took his own life a year after the essay was published. (Yes, the inclusion of the Bourdain profile does seem to stretch the book’s premise.) The original essays are unaltered, but Keefe provides updates at the end of each one. Keefe masterfully captures the chefs frantic energy and creativity, as well as his struggles with substance abuse. While El Chapo was not sitting down for interviews, the author does hop on the back of Anthony Bourdain’s scooter for a tour of Hanoi. He emphasizes the importance of fact-checking, and he documents his attempts to get as close as possible to his subjects. Whether Keefe is exploring the wine fraud that plagues the world of the one percent or digging into a university shooter’s past, he shows remarkable skill in explaining complicated schemes and a dogged determination to track down leads. Coming Jin the US/Canada and July 7 in the UK/Ireland/Australia/New Zealand.

rogues patrick radden keefe review

A collection of 12 New Yorker stories, covering a dozen years, most of them about people behaving badly. What follows is a combination of investigative journalism and personality profiles that often take the author on a globetrotting adventure-complicated stories that have room to breathe in the long-form format. ROGUES: True Stories of Grifters, Killers, Rebels and Crooks. Keefe ( Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty) collects 12 of his New Yorker pieces: thematically (albeit loosely) related examinations of people who live on (or outside of) the edge of the law. As Keefe says in his preface They reflect on some of my abiding preoccupations: crime and corruption, secrets and lies, the permeable membrane separating licit.










Rogues patrick radden keefe review