Review by Library Journal Review
This book explores the seamy side of migration to scenic southern Italy. Observing that boats from North Africa have become increasingly filled with Nigerian women, journalist Nadeau (Angel Face: Sex, Murder, and the Inside Story of Amanda Knox) traces their lives in Italy, where prostitution is legal. Original interviews and stories collected from rescue workers, public officials, patrons of sex workers, and the female victims of sex slavery themselves form the core of this graphic narrative. Shelters staffed by Catholic nuns are described along with similar havens subject to corrupt government payment schemes. Later chapters discuss the criminal culture and inefficiencies of modern-day Italy as well as factors that drive migration to this economically challenged European nation. Possible solutions to this dire social problem with links to the drug trade and terrorism are reviewed in a final chapter. Endnotes reflect the author's journalistic background. Questions remain about the need for state regulation of sex work. VERDICT Darker than Helene Stapinski's Murder in Matera, this timely and troubling exposé should appeal to a similar audience willing to embrace an unromanticized view of Italian life.-Antoinette -Brinkman, formerly with Southwest -Indiana Mental Health Ctr. Lib., Evansville © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Journalistic account of the sex trade that runs from the west coast of Africa to the southern coast of Italy and beyond.American journalist Nadeau, author of an earlier account of the Italian trial of American murder suspect Amanda Knox (Angel Face, 2010), turns her attention to the Camorra, or Calabrian Mafia, and their engagements with the drug and arms trades, which in turn net them human cargo: young women from Nigeria and other African countries, recruited at home and promised livelihoods in Europe, then smuggled into Italy on overcrowded, easily shipwrecked boats. Reports Nadeau, "in 2016, eleven thousand Nigerian women and girls arrived in Italy on those boats." There they were collected and put to work in the mob-controlled prostitution industry, with no way out. It does not help that Nigerian women can claim asylum easily by saying that they are threatened by Boko Haram, nor that the immigration authorities "may even know that [a woman] is being trafficked and forced to sell sex against her will, but they still look away." Church-based and other nongovernmental agencies have stepped in but have been overwhelmed so that few women are intercepted as they land and can be guided into applying for safe asylum away from Camorra control. "They have to work fast," writes the author, "because the traffickers are waiting in the refugee camps to ferry the girls to their madams, often within the first week of their arrival." The book, built on interviews with many participants, is well-reported and consistently heartbreaking yet occasionally repetitive. Moreover, the author drops threads only to pick them up later, slowed by too much attention to minor detail ("Some men stop on motorcycles. The teenage boys who stop are invariably riding mopeds").Though sometimes a chore to read, Nadeau's book makes for a useful work of advocacy, calling attention to a terrible traffic in human misery. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.