![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() In a dizzying montage, each of their stories mingles with others involving revolt in Mexico and Central America, as the native population rises up against hated European and mestizo masters-the rebels led by revolutionaries and visionaries communicating with the spirit world through red macaws-and with tales of a massive, well-organized drug-smuggling ring operated with blessings from Tucson and border police, the local judiciary, and especially the CIA. Silko's story is centered in Tucson, where two elderly sisters occupy their fortified ranch-together with a motley crew of vicious dogs and desperadoes a coke addict and ex-exotic dancer recovering from the abduction of her child and a Laguna loner, whose failure to keep a Hollywood crew from defiling a newly discovered stone serpent on tribal land forced him into exile. A dense and occasionally dazzling saga from poet-novelist Silko (Ceremony, 1977 Storyteller, 1981), who draws on the fullness of her Laguna-Anglo-Latino heritage in the kaleidoscopic view of drug-dealing, revolution, and ancient prophecies north and south of the border. ![]()
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