


I think the book was so intriguing because I could relate to Davis on a personal level. Lucky for me, I did not take things as far as Tito did. I have Wow! My first thought was, "How can this story be real?" Growing up in a very small town myself, I understand the feeling of escaping small town life at any cost. These attributes, no doubt, helped to get him out of many tight spaces and lots of trouble. He is not what you imagine a drug dealer to be. He was a charismatic, young, and educated man. Wow! My first thought was, "How can this story be real?" Growing up in a very small town myself, I understand the feeling of escaping small town life at any cost. If he ever writes a sequel, I would read it.more I couldn't believe the last page was the last page. It's amazing to read how unflinching he is about the choices in his life. Davis is very unflinching about the good and the bad that happens to him. He befriends people who sell cocaine or are hitmen for hire. He doesn't know any Spanish and keeps trying to learn more. The majority of the book is while he is on the run in Latin America. He sells ephedrine, then he sells marijuana, and then he gets framed for meth and has to run for it. He gets into it, he makes a ton of money, and then he gets out of it. We're not big big, but we've heard of luxury and all that!Īnyway, Davis gets into selling drugs. He really emphasized how podunk SD is, which got a little offensive. He was actually born and raised in South Dakota, which is where I'm from. He sells ephedrine, then he sells marijuana, and then he gets framed for meth and h The beginning of the book was slow, but I'm glad that I stuck with it. We're not big big, but we've heard of luxury and all that! Anyway, Davis gets into selling drugs. The beginning of the book was slow, but I'm glad that I stuck with it. Millions of dollars came and went as Tito stayed one step ahead of the Feds and the Federales. He survived in the Third World facing adversity at every turn. Tito didn’t have a mega-mansion filled with pretty girls and expensive cars. Facing thirty years, Davis slipped into Mexico, not knowing a word of Spanish, which began a thirteen-year odyssey that led him to an underground hideout for a Medellin cartel, through the jungles of the Darien Gap, the middle of Mumbai's madness, and much more. ˃˃˃ Life On Th The Drug Game From The InsideĪfter serving a nickel, he got into the weed game, but just when he got going, he was set up by a childhood friend. While at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas, he started manufacturing White Crosses, aka speed, and soon had the Banditos Motorcycle Club distributing ten million pills a week. Dan "Tito" Davis comes from a town in South Dakota that's so small everyone knows their neighbor's cat's name.
