Joe Sanderson seemed like he would live an ordinary life. He was born and raised in Illinois in a middle class family. As he was finishing high school, he had a revelation. The family went on a vacation to Mexico City and when they left, they agreed to leave Joe behind to make his own way home. He traveled around Mexico before returning and an itch was born. Joe was not longer content with the idea of going to college, getting married and raising a family. He wanted to see the world.
And see it he did. He traveled to Jamaica, then through Europe and Asia. He met the love of his life on the road but she wanted stability and Joe wanted adventure. He was in Vietnam during the war and managed to get to the front lines by pretending to be a journalist. He went to Africa, specifically Biafra and Nigeria during the famines and civil wars that became genocides and worked as a volunteer, handing out food and medicine. But Central and South America always called to him.
When he returned to those countries that make up Central and South America, Joe was radicalized by the war and turmoil he had seen around the world. He eventually fell in with the guerilla fighters of El Salvador and died fighting with them in the jungles. Wherever he traveled, he kept a diary and wrote home letters to his mother, brother and father.
Hector Tobar is the son of Guatemalan immigrants. He worked for twenty years as a journalist for the Los Angeles Times where he was on a team that won the Pulitzer Prize for coverage of the LA Riots. He has also written six novels. He came into possession of the papers that Joe Sanderson left behind after his death in El Salvador and then contacted the family and was able to find out more about Sanderson through their recollections and Joe's letters home over the years. The book is a mix of fiction and nonfiction and the reader will accompany Joe as he travels the world and ends up fighting against tyranny. This book is recommended for both fiction and nonfiction readers.





























