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Pedro and Marques Take Stock

A Picaresque Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In the favelas of Porto Alegre, Brazil, marijuana is hard to come by. Supermarket stock clerks Pedro and Marques spend their days unloading trucks, restocking shelves, and dreaming of a better life, of breaking the cycle of poverty that has afflicted their families and their community. Well-acquainted with the drug dealers in their neighborhood and seeing an opportunity to earn a little extra cash, they decide to start a weed-dealing operation.
The economic hierarchies of Porto Alegre are turned upside down as, almost accidentally, the two men build a thriving enterprise and get rich, quickly. Distribution grows from dime bags to kilos, and Pedro and Marques begin to plan for a future where low-wage work will never again be a necessity for them and their families. All too soon however, their operation starts attracting outsider attention, and cracks in their carefully crafted and seemingly untouchable world begin to show, culminating in one final, lethal showdown.
A witty, voice-driven, and electrifying portrait of poverty and a canny examination of the ethics of drug dealing and low-wage labor in the underbelly of Brazil, Pedro and Marques Take Stock is a contemporary picaresque novel of class and crime.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 25, 2023
      Falero makes his English-language debut with a vivid portrayal of poverty and the drug trade in the favelas of Porto Alegre, Brazil. It’s 2009, and Pedro and Marques are both stock clerks at a branch of Fênix, a regional supermarket chain, who dream of a better life. When Pedro overhears a neighborhood kid complain about how hard it is to get weed, he decides to start dealing, and invites Marques to join him. With baby number two on the way, and profoundly moved by Pedro’s speeches about how exploited they are as employees (“You really think we work less than the dude who owns this chain?”), Marques agrees. After violence spikes between rival cartels, Pedro manages to broker a peace deal and keep the black market profitable for everyone. With business booming, Pedro spends his money extravagantly (“He had years and years of poverty to make up for,”) and has trouble getting back to the straight and narrow. Falero describes the logistics of the drug trade in minute detail, to the point of sometimes bogging down the narrative. Still, his characters’ yearnings feel palpable, as do the forces limiting their chances for success. A gritty portrait of life on the margins emerges from this well-wrought narrative. Agent: Marina Penalva, Casanovas & Lynch.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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