I originally picked up this book as part of my new years resolution to read more, and it was free. I am so grateful I did! As a scholar/practitioner (sorry that sounds so pretentious!), this book was so helpful in answering some theoretical and practical-historical questions I've had. It does a wonderful job of rooting the political history of the post war pre 2015 years in Guatemala in an ethnography of a community in HueHuetengano: answering some really important questions about why post-Civil War politics in Guatemala have taken the shape they have, some interesting reflections on how development does and doesn't work, recovery and maintenance of historical memory, and how neoliberal governance has reshaped racism and exclusion in the Guatemala Highlands, rooting his analysis in the long arc of counter-insurgency and structural violence. Really appreciated his description of "capacidad," and "radical pessimism," there is so much here for someone interested/working in development, interested in indigenous politics in Guatemala, and good ethnography. Highly recommended!