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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher |
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SOME PEOPLE NEED KILLING
A Memoir of Murder in My Country
Patricia Evangelista is a thirty-eight-year-old writer and journalist in Manila. She was born in 1985, five months before the dictator Ferdinand Marcos fell.
During the recent reign of terror of President Rodrigo Duterte, Evangelista has worked a distinctive and lonely beat that was perhaps at once the worst and most vital job in all of journalism: To chronicle the tens of thousands of extrajudicial killings ordered by Duterte in the name of fighting a drug war to capture the atmosphere of fear that comes when an elected president claims powers well beyond those granted to him and to record the real-time collapse of the democracy in her country.
In SOME PEOPLE NEED KILLING, Evangelista's towering and monumental book on the life and death of Philippine democracy, the Rappler's "trauma reporter" (as she describes herself) writes a book for the ages.
In the tradition of Ryszard Kapuscinski, Joan Didion, and Philip Gourevitch, Evangelista recounts a life and career of braving all consequences to bear witness in her country and - in this era of global autocratic resurgence - reveal essential truths about power, and of how people can willingly surrender their sovereignty to a strongman who runs for office on a platform of taking away their rights.
As the greatest journalists have always done, Evangelista immerses herself in this dark world of killers, and their victims: A vigilante named Simon who she met in a hotel room, reflected what seems to be the psychological accommodation that most of the country had made and gave her the title for this book - "I'm really not a bad guy," he said. "I'm not all bad. Some people need killing."
But Evangelista does something else, too. With a magisterial scope, and in a deeply personal voice, she tells the full benighted story of how it all came to this. The social history of a failed democracy that is only as old as she is, and of her own family's complicity in the Marcos dictatorship, only now seems a clear harbinger of the tragic present.
Evangelista has written a book that is both definitive of this moment and a demonstration to all democracies on earth, that deadlocked and corrupt politics, riven by untended ethnic, racial, and class strife, will give way to something even worse.
Writing like this has seldom been so beautiful and a book that is so needed to read now with the current world events, this is literary journalism and personal history with investigative reportage, at its best.
Patricia Evangelista is a trauma journalist and former investigative reporter for Philippine news company Rappler. Her reporting on armed conflict and the aftermath of Super Typhoon Haiyan was awarded the Kate Webb Prize for exceptional journalism in dangerous conditions. She was a Headlands Artist in Residence, a recipient of the Whiting Creative Nonfiction Grant, and a fellow of the John Logan Nonfiction Program, the Marshall McLuhan Fellowship, the De La Salle University Democracy Discourse Series, the New America Fellows Program, and the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma. Her work investigating President Rodrigo Duterte's drug war has earned several local and international accolades. She lives in Manila.
Translation rights: Random House Inc./PRH
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Published 2023-10-17 by Random House |