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Soldiers and Kings book cover

Soldiers and Kings

by Jason De León

Investigative Journalism
Anthropology
Immigration
367 Pages

"Groundbreaking and deeply human—De León takes us inside a world we thought we knew but have never truly seen."

Synopsis

Political instability, poverty, climate change, and the insatiable demand for cheap labor fuel clandestine movement across borders worldwide. As those borders harden, the demand for smugglers—coyotes, guides—who aid migrants increases every year. Yet the real lives and work of smugglers are only ever reported from a distance, using tired tropes and stereotypes, often depicting them as boogie men and violent warlords. In an effort to understand this essential yet extralegal billion-dollar global industry, MacArthur "genius" grant winner and internationally recognized anthropologist Jason De León embedded with a group of smugglers moving migrants across Mexico over seven years. The result of this unprecedented access is Soldiers and Kings—the first ever in-depth, character-driven look at human smuggling. This heart-wrenching and intimate narrative revolves around the life and death of one coyote who falls in love and tries to leave smuggling behind. In a powerful, original voice, De León chronicles the lives of low-level foot soldiers breaking into the smuggling game and morally conflicted gang leaders who oversee ragtag crews of guides and informants along the migrant trail. This is not the simplified narrative of villains and victims, but a complex portrait of people navigating impossible circumstances in a broken system. Soldiers and Kings is both a groundbreaking glimpse of a difficult-to-access world and a masterpiece of narrative nonfiction.

Our Take

Soldiers and Kings is a landmark work of investigative anthropology that fundamentally challenges how we understand migration and the people who facilitate it. Jason De León's seven years of embedded research represents the kind of access journalists and academics rarely achieve, and he uses it to humanize people typically demonized or simplified in political discourse. What makes this book extraordinary is De León's refusal to romanticize or condemn his subjects. The smugglers he follows are neither heroes nor villains but complex human beings operating within a system that creates impossible choices. The central love story adds emotional depth without sentimentalizing, showing how even in the shadow economy of human smuggling, people fall in love, make plans, and dream of different futures. De León's prose is vivid and immediate, reading like a thriller while maintaining anthropological rigor. He captures the terror of the journey, the desperation of migrants, and the moral ambiguity of those who profit from that desperation while also providing essential services. The book illuminates how border enforcement policies create the conditions for smuggling to thrive, making it a lucrative industry precisely because legal migration is nearly impossible. Readers who appreciated The Devil's Highway by Luis Alberto Urrea or Enrique's Journey by Sonia Nazario will find similar compassion and investigative depth here. Soldiers and Kings is essential reading for understanding migration—not as an abstract policy issue but as lived human experience.

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