Bad Karma by Paul Wilson
In the summer of 1978, twenty-one-year-old Paul Wilson jumps at the chance to join two local icons on a dream surf trip to mainland Mexico, unaware their ultimate destination lies in the heart of drug cartel country. Having no earthly idea of where he’ll get the money to pay his share, and determined to prove his mettle, he does the only thing he can think of: He robs a supermarket. And, if karma didn’t already have enough reason to doom the trip, he soon learns one of his companions is a convicted killer on the run, and the other an unscrupulous cad. Mishap and misfortune rule the days, and mere survival takes precedence over surfing.
Original photographs (including pre-kingpin El Chapo), and Wilson’s strong narrative style, combine to make this true story personal—in the traditions of Into The Wild by Jon Krakauer, Che Guevara's Motorcycle Diaries, and Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas by Hunter S. Thompson—except this tale had to wait for the statute of limitations to expire before it could be told.
Original photographs (including pre-kingpin El Chapo), and Wilson’s strong narrative style, combine to make this true story personal—in the traditions of Into The Wild by Jon Krakauer, Che Guevara's Motorcycle Diaries, and Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas by Hunter S. Thompson—except this tale had to wait for the statute of limitations to expire before it could be told.