Behind the facade of sombreros & tequila, tourist traps & holiday resorts, there lies a very different Mexico. In ” Sliced Iguana”, Isabella Tree explores a town that is the heart & lifeblood of the Americas, a country of extremes & contradictions. In a land so markedly shaped by machismo, she finds a town controlled by arm-wrestling matriarchs & party-mad transvestites & in war-torn Chiapas she discovers shamans worshipping Mayan gods inside Catholic churches & conducting exorcisms with the aid of Pepsi. At a graveside vigil on the Night of the Dead, she encounters the last delicate vestige of a pre-Columbian cult that elsewhere has morphed into an Americanised Halloween. With a group of Huichol Indians, perhaps the last truly autonomous tribe in the entire American continent, she participates in rituals using peyote, the hallucinogenic cactus, to bring rain to the drought-stricken sierra & appease the forces of Nature so recklessly abused by the conquistadors & their successors. Through her narrative, Isabella Tree threads the brightly coloured history of Mexico & tells the stories of the people that have defined its fractured past & will shape its future
- kings & conquistadors, politicians & rebels, shamans & priests, mestizos & indigenous Indians. This is a story of Mexico like no other, capturing the essence of its psyche & illuminating the struggles & hopes of a people & a country on the cusp of change.