[Road Work 01] • Road Work · Among Tyrants, Heroes, Rogues, and Beasts
![[Road Work 01] • Road Work · Among Tyrants, Heroes, Rogues, and Beasts](/cover/K8HUH0PCe-FNPKXj/big/[Road%20Work%2001]%20%e2%80%a2%20Road%20Work%20%c2%b7%20Among%20Tyrants,%20Heroes,%20Rogues,%20and%20Beasts.jpg)
- Authors
- Bowden, Mark
- Publisher
- Atlantic Monthly Press
- Tags
- history , retail , biography & autobiography , nonfiction
- ISBN
- 9781555846091
- Date
- 2004-01-01T00:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 0.51 MB
- Lang
- en
**“Painstakingly reported stories about losers, oddballs and con men” from the #1 *New York Times*–bestselling journalist (*The New York Times Book Review*).**
From the author of *Black Hawk Down* comes a riveting collection of the most diverse and far-reaching of Mark Bowden’s award-winning nonfiction—“with fascinating features on Norman Mailer, the war against terror, and even a Philadelphia Zoo gorilla, Bowden’s range is broad” (*Entertainment Weekly*).
Whether traveling to Rhode Island where one of the largest cocaine rings in history is uncovered, or to the Luangwa Valley in Zambia where anti-poachers fight to save the black rhino, Bowden takes us down rough roads previously off-limits: the top-secret world of Guantanamo Bay; Saddam Hussein’s post 9/11 days on the run; a pimp’s inside track on police corruption in Philadelphia; and Al Sharpton’s campaign trail.
Bowden also invites readers along to meet a small-town high school football team, farmers who make bras for cows, the Rocky Balboa statue in Philadelphia, and on an inspiring trip to Disney World with a wide-eyed group of terminally ill children.
In *Road Work*, Mark Bowden “fashion[s] prose that reads like good fiction, with the bonus that his stories are true” (*The New York Times Book Review*).
“Astute character reading and solid research combine with ingenious and stylish prose: a superior portfolio from a journalist who stays at the top of his game.” —*Kirkus Reviews*, starred review
“Bowden is unlike any other journalist . . . Superb reporting, a fine mind conceiving the story line, and a compelling writing style lead to something approaching immortality.” —*St. Louis Post-Dispatch*