BLOW: How a Small-Town Boy Made $100 Million with the Medellin Cocaine Cartel and Lost It All Reviews

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BLOW: How a Small-Town Boy Made $100 Million with the Medellin Cocaine Cartel and Lost It Allx$5.99

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BLOW is the unlikely story of George Jung's roller coaster ride from middle-class high school football hero to the heart of Pable Escobar's Medellin cartel-- the largest importer of the United States cocaine supply in the 1980s. Jung's early business of flying marijuana into the United States from the mountains of Mexico took a dramatic turn when he met Carlos Lehder, a young Colombian car thief with connections to the then newly born cocaine operation in his native land. Together they created a new model for selling cocaine, turning a drug used primarily by the entertainment elite into a massive and unimaginably lucrative enterprise-- one whose earnings, if legal, would have ranked the cocaine business as the sixth largest private enterprise in the Fortune 500.

The ride came to a screeching halt when DEA agents and Florida police busted Jung with three hundred kilos of coke, effectively unraveling his fortune. But George wasn't about to go down alone. He planned to bring down with him one of the biggest cartel figures ever caught.

With a riveting insider account of the lurid world of international drug smuggling and a super-charged drama of one man's meteoric rise and desperate fall, Bruce Porter chronicles Jung's life using unprecedented eyewitness sources in this critically acclaimed true crime classic.



Customer Reviews

  • The Forrest Gump of the Drug Business


    By A136YD08SCJ2LV on 2001-05-08
    I read this book after seeing the movie "Blow". The movie was average but the subject matter was something I wanted to explore after seeing George Jung's picture at the end. I was not disappointed. I couldn't put the book down and throughly enjoyed it.

    As all biographies do, the initial setup of his formative years is somewhat boring and can be skimmed. Bad student, played football. Nothing else is relevant. But when the book overlays living in Los Angeles in the 60's with the drug trade, this book really heats up. Jung reminds me of Forrest Gump. Always in a place where drug history was happening. Particularly where his old grass connection is the key to establishing him as a major player in the new cocaine business.

    The book and the movie have many similar points but many different ones. For example, in the movie, his first stewardess girlfriend dies. But in the book, there is no mention of when and how they split up. In the movie, he misses his daughter and wants contact. There is no mention of that in the book.

    The book really projects that Jung ...got in the right business at the right time. But he's not really a smart guy. The movie covers some of his busts correctly but the Cape Cod bust that starts his downfall is almost unbelievable how stupid he could be. Read the book to find this bizarre fact.

    As a earlier reviewer who identified himself as a former drug runner stated, using your own product clouds your judgement and clearly that applied to Jung. Irrespective, this book gives great insight into the drug traffic business and shows what a bizarre environment it was. Somewhat like the Wild West. Read this book for entertainment value as it reads quickly and is very informative.

  • Great Crime Story


    By AY83RE2W7D6T on 2001-11-06
    I really enjoyed reading this book. It is a true story of the rise & fall of George Jung. George became involved with smuggling pot in from Mexico in the 1960's & went on to become one of the founding members of the Colombian Cocaine Cartel led by Pablo Escobar. Geogre intially was Pablo's MAJOR U.S. cocaine distributor, was the one link Pablo had to the U.S. cocaine distribution network. Another Colombian, Carlos Ledher, stole George's U.S. connections, & cut him out of the business. George then basically married into a Colombian family, and started moving smaller cocaine contract loads through a relative by marriage-Humberto. Humberto was connected to Pablo Escobar.
    This book is well written, and also tells a bit about drugs, their cultivation, the human physiology of drug interactions, and how basic smuggling operations are established. It is also just a plain good story. I thought the ending was a bit sad though.
    To clear up the question of: "Is George free, or in Prison". George was free, and delivering seafood to restaurants in Massachusetts. He subsequently got busted smuggling pot from Mexico, and received a 22 year jail sentence in 1993-1994, and is currtely in prison at Otisville, New York.

  • Vicarious But Safe Living Through George Jung


    By AGCOCRW8A56U8 on 2000-06-07
    A well written account of, frankly, a self-serving jerk. The story was fascinating, especially to one as naïve as me about the drug trade. George Jung was amazingly adept at the cocaine business, was a shrewd businessman, and was not so much of a megalomaniac as to bring about quite the downfall that befell Carlos Lehder (his onetime mentor, then partner, then deserter). However, Jung abandoned his family, spiraled into paranoia and drug addiction, and ended up [allegedly] broke. The book does not have a preachy tone, if you can look past Jung's quotes, and I think Porter did an excellent job of writing a candid, interesting, and objective account. Additionally, the book serves as a good primer into the drug trade in general, beyond Jung's experience.

  • Blow - A prospective form a former drug smuggler


    By on 2000-10-26
    It's hard to feel much sympathy for George Jung, a young man who managed in the formative years of drug smuggling, to accumulate and then lose a house stuffed with $100 dollar bills, as result of his efforts to pioneer the many pit falls of the early days of marijuana and cocaine importing and distribution. His enthusiasm is matched only be his naivete as is evidenced by his early association with people like Carlos Lederer, a major player in the Columbian cocaine business. In his efforts to acquire a "comfortable" nest egg, George falls victim to the 3 demons of the drug trade; greed (insert here, not knowing when to quit), ego, and love of the 'product'; the last pitfall clouding all ability to think objectively re: the first 2 demons. I say this from having "been there / done that" and survived comfortably after a few years as a pilot in the drug transport business. The book dwells excessively on George's childhood to the point of boredom. Its 300 pages could have been reduced by as much a third. But it does give a highly accurate look at the good / bad and exciting old days in the drug running business. For all his short comings, George Jung manages to come off as a likable and fascinating character, well worth being the subject of a forthcoming film staring Matt Dillon and Max Perlich.

  • Got to know when to calm down


    By A2HW33PQSRHLNO on 2004-12-18
    For anyone expecting this book to be a kind of light, or detailing of the events in the film it's not. The George Jung we read about in Bruce Porter's book is a quite different one from the one played by Johnny Depp. He's a lot smarter (while not exactly being a genius), a lot more greedy, and a lot tougher. Plus, anyone enamored of the movie will be starstruck by the level of embellishment Ted Demme indulged in while making it. Jung never stopped dealing, even after he basically got a "get out of jail free" card for testifying against Carlos Lehder (Diego in the movie), a sinister megalomaniac who along with Jung basically introduced coke to the US. There was no "one last run" for his daughter, who we only hear about a few times in the book in vague reveries of regret Jung has for all she had to witness in his "glory days". Mirtha was not quite the ruthless bitch Penelope Cruz played, and seemed to have stuck by Jung through quite a bit. The book is essentially a repetitive documentation of drug smuggle after drug smuggle, until Jung gets way too comfortable and dipping into his own stash all the time. He just doesn't know when to calm down. Soon, he's so fried that he starts bragging to undercover cops and taking them under his wing as fellow smugglers, and so of course getting busted.

    For all this, Jung is no ruthless monster like many of the people we see him associate with. He's actually kind of a middle class goofball who had a business mind and weird determination to never be poor, which may have stemmed from his childhood (who cares? that's no excuse.) He seems to have had quite a bit of intellect and could have been successful at something other than his purely destructive occupation. He simply chose his own path and paid for it. He gets out of jail after he should have gone away forever, starts dealing weed again, and then goes away for good. There's no heartbreaking twist to any of this, just one man's greed getting the best of him. This is a sad story not for Jung but for his daughter, his wife, and his father, who also seems to have seen some good in him the whole way through. (We actually get to read the real tape Jung made for his father, one of the highlights of the book). An alternately exciting, depressing tale.

  • AN INSIDE VIEW OF LIFE IN THE FACT LANE!
    By A3SN9EF7GTNEU2 on 2001-04-30
    While it may be difficult to empathize with the downfall of one of the biggest drug cartels in history, the story of George Jung will certainly amaze, capture and hold your attention from start to finish. Anyone who grew up in the sixties, an era of "flower children, hippies,love-ins, sit-ins," Vietnam protests and communal living, will recall the introduction into our society of "pot" and LSD. George Jung became one of the largest importers of marijuana, which eventually led to his connection with Carlos Lehder and the Meddellin Cocaine Cartel.

    From opulant living, a home literally lined with money, fast women, fast cars and fast-paced lifestyle to the downward spiral of drugs, paranoia, health problems and arrest, this is the actual account of George Jung's life. This is the amazing journey of a man who had it all, to a defeated man who lost everything in the process. It is an inside look at life in the fast lane from the glorious moments in the sun to absolute terror, corruption and destruction. Now a major motion picture, you will not want to miss either the book or the movie - both are excellent.

  • Great book about drug smuggling
    By A76YCUFC6WMW6 on 2001-03-24
    This is one of the better books about the drug trade that I have read. The level of detail that Porter provides about the smuggling operations is excellent. He devotes a good portion of the book to discussion of this and that's the main reason why this book is so interesting. On the other hand, George Jung's story is a typical story of the drug dealer who doesn't know when to stop. I did think that discussing Jung's childhood did not really help the book in any way. It simply gave us background that really was not required to understand the rest of his life. Porter might have been better served by focusing less on Jung and more on the smuggling. Overall, however, I would recommend this book.

  • Jailing Jung (Blow) and Killing Pablo
    By on 2004-07-07
    Those interested in learning about the disparate personalities largely responsible for the cocaine avalanche that washed over America need only read this excellent book and Mark Bowden's equally fascinating work of non-fiction titled "Killing Pablo."

    In "Blow", we laugh at the ordeals of George Jung and company as they grow rich exploiting America's burgeoning drug market while being chased, indicted, and jailed by inept and unsophisticated law enforcement agencies and prosecutors. In "Killing Pablo", we shudder over the actions of the world's (formerly) most ruthless drug lord who held Colombia hostage through rewards and ruthless punishment aptly termed "plata o plomo" (silver or lead).

    Porter and Bowden performed exhaustive research on their respective protagonists and produced rousing narratives. Two of the finest works of non-fiction - of any topic - I've ever read.

  • Astonishes the ignorant....
    By A1J6FJRJXZ24IR on 2001-09-21
    Being a small-town gal from Mid-Mo, I had no IDEA about anything about the drug trade. This book will open your eyes and get you inside the head of the most successful cocaine smuggler in US history.
    Here is my review of the book as it appeared in my high school newspaper:
    If people were ever interested in smuggling cocaine into the United States in the 1970's and 80's, they only had to come to one person - a man named George Jung.
    The novel "Blow" recounts Jung's rise and desperate fall in the Medellin cocaine cartel, an association of high price manufacturers of the illegal product, where he played a key role alongside the infamous Pablo Escobar.
    Writing in chronological order of Jung's adventures and the exotic locales he visits, author Bruce Porter uses his exclusive eyewitness sources to tell the fascinating life story of a successful drug smuggler.
    The book's success lies in the exceptional amount of detail present. The intricately woven web of facts mesmerizes the reader as the story unfolds. Porter leaves nothing of this amazing story untold, which makes the story complete; the reader does not feel cheated out of information.
    "Blow" is also successful regarding the intimate interviews given by Jung; his wife, Mirtha; and his may associates in his million dollar drug operation. Porter chooses the right times to let the people involved tell the story. Tucked in with the rest of the story are quotes and anecdotes from Jung's closest friends and businessman. Kudos to Porter for getting the interviewees to reveal so much about their lives.
    The only downside present is that with so many characters involved, the reader might forget who some people are and what thier part in the novel is.
    Although changed and dramatized for effect, the movie is an accurate representation of the novel.
    "Blow" is an enjoyable and intriguing true crime classic.

  • BLOW: How A Small Time Boy Made millions with the Mede
    By A3KL821VHHHZP4 on 2002-02-19
    Saw this movie and had to read the book.
    What a powerful work. George Jung is a genius in what he does, unfortunately his work is illegal. He outsmarted all of them in the beginning. You have to feel some sympathy for his financial loss. Would love to know what he is thinking now.
    Great book. Must read.

  • Literally Being Blown Away
    By A204Q7RH85I0OA on 2005-03-23
    I was handed Blow from a friend and finished it within a busy schedule in less than a nine days. It is the unbelievable story of George Jung's life from being a small town local hero, to becoming deeply seeded in the Colombian drug trade. He managed to make more than 100 million dollars before he was caught for the last time and his extraordinary life leaves you nothing but dumbfounded.

    My favorite aspect of this novel is that you fall in love with and root for the bad-guy. The reader never really acknowledges George as the enemy even though he is part of a murderous, criminal trade. Because his personality is so likeable you disregard many of the immoral things that he does. How he plays the prison game and makes friends everywhere he goes. George even manages to befriend Senor Pablo Escobar. As a white kid from suburbia this feat is astonishing.

    The story is written through a mix of George's and author Bruce Porter's point of view and with interviews from several of his close friends and colleagues you can understand his life and actions from every point of view. George's dialogue is especially captivating because he is such a humble, carefree man with it seems no fear and complete control.

    Since the book is vulgar and sometimes portrays cocaine use in a humorous and unapologetic fashion I would recommend the book for at least, mature late teens. This book instantly became a new favorite of mine and because it is a true story I think it is especially unbelievable. This intensely researched and complete chronicle of George Jung's life is one of the most irresistible stories I have ever read.


  • Unbelievable!!!!
    By A2HZ7QF9FWEDXM on 2001-04-01
    I picked up this book one rainy Saturday and was mesmerized! George's rise from small town kid to big time drug smuggler is one story you don't want to miss! Porter has amassed an amazing collection of information on George's "career" advancement. The characters are better than anything imaginable and the details of the operations- Wow! One can almost develop a true affinity for George, he seems so likeable, until you remember the ramifications of his smuggling. At one point, I found myself almost rooting him on... I hope the movie can do the book some justice.

  • check your spelling
    By on 2001-05-01
    If you look at the book jacket, you will notice colombia the country ,is spelled columbia. You would think they would be more careful and spell a country correctly.

  • Blow
    By A3PBL969H67J34 on 2004-01-12
    Ever wonder what would be your life if they made it a movie?
    Awesome book! Well-written for a pop bio.

    I fell asleep reading it, dreamt about about the Medellin cartel, picked it up again before getting out of bed.

    This, the real story, was messier than the movie. The essence was the same, but the order was different. Details were moved around. George had a sister. His girlfriend didn't die of cancer. He didn't quit after breaking with Carlos.

    That was interesting to me, but I found this story just amazing. . . and well put-together. Good work Porter.

  • Sloppy job, but still interesting
    By A3D1NSB3FMPTMM on 2005-08-24
    Aware that the movie is only loosely based on a true story, I turned to this book for a more factual account of the rise and fall of George Jung. But Jung's own account of the execution he witnessed on the Escobar ranch, to pick an example, differs as much from the one in this book as from the movie!

    By page four I knew this wasn't secretly penned by Truman Capote. It is vulgar and loaded with malapropisms, for example: the word "obviate" is repeatedly used where "eliminate" is intended. Evidently no one at Harper Collins knows what the word means. "Secrete" is used for "secret." There are stretches long enough that I was able to get into the read before pausing to wonder what was meant by a non sequitur or a sentence that is not a sentence, but a slight effort by a copy editor or high school English teacher would have greatly improved the work. The editors and "fact checker" should all be serving time for criminal negligence. Terrible job.

    Carlos Lehder is portrayed as a reckless megalomaniac brazen enough to unabashedly ramp up his smuggling through Norman's Cay to full tilt --really taking it to another level-- seemingly without regard for how much attention it would draw; indiscretion ultimately did the cartel in. There are interesting tales of boaters being chased away from the island, including a retired Walter Cronkite! Once a boat was found adrift in that vicinity, spattered with blood.

    Surprisingly, considering the vast differences between this book and the movie, the fight scene with Mirtha driving up the I-95 one night actually did occur.

    Regarding the Eastham bust, George was said to be looking at a ten-year sentence for the coke, but the book makes no mention whatsoever as to whether Richard Barile did in fact have the machine gun he mentioned at least twice to the undercover cop that evening, possession of which would carry the same sentence under federal law --not to mention what the state of Massachusetts would have done to him. There are many such places throughout the book that left me wondering why something was covered so unevenly and then just abandoned. At another point it refers in passing to George having two children, with no mention before or after of a second child being born.

    Some of the "factoids" regarding aviation and firearms are hilariously inaccurate. A Hughes 500 helicopter becomes a "Huey 500." ("Huey" refers to an entirely different type of helicopter, and there's no such thing as a "Huey 500.") And once and for all, folks, a .357 magnum will not go through an engine block; that's a myth. (It just ricochets, leaving a tiny dent on the surface. Don't try this at home.)

    For an enthralling account of indulgence, lust, and greed in the 1970's narcotics biz try "Underground Empire" by James Mills. It covers selected DEA CENTAC operations on different continents. Think you can't finish a thousand-page book? You wait. :-) Also, another bio of George Jung is currently in the works. And for instant gratification search the web for "Norman's Cay."


  • As my fellow colleague so eloquently put it, "Pizzazz!"
    By APHGGBN7K4SNE on 1999-02-04
    "Blow," a fast and furious romp through the heydays of coke, is likely to give you nose-bleed. But don't go running for your straw just yet. With the 20/20 insight that hindsight provides, I would like to suggest that the author and Mr. Yung's collective noses have grown a bit since penning this non-fiction? Notwithstanding, it is still an interesting, if not warn, story. If you still want to read a story that hindsight has illuminated, not eroded, then read "CIA: Cocaine In America," or "Dark Allinace," especially the former, it will "blow" your socks off!

  • This book will Blow you away!
    By on 2001-04-08
    Blow's double meaning works well to describe the blown life of its protagonist and the object of his destruction. Although fairly blaséé and uninspired throughout the first third of the story, the frenetic pace of the remaining two thirds more than makes up for it. I also felt like I couldn't see the coca plantation for the coca plant. It continually begged the question that "If one man could traffic hundreds of millions of dollars worth of coke, then how much coke truly flows into this country on an annual basis?" If you're looking for a book that maintains its frenetic pace throughout and that addresses the much larger questions posed by "Blow," then I STRONGLY recommend you order "Operation Pseudo Miranda" by Kenneth Bucchi. Pseudo Miranda, according to its jacket, is also being made into a movie by Universal Studios. I can't wait!!!

  • A real page turner
    By A3PQGX4P6MB7D9 on 2004-03-11
    George Jung is widely acknowedged as the man who introduced cocaine for mass consumption to people in the United States, and this book tells us how he did it. Sort of a lesson in how to smuggle.

    From his begginings as a high school football player, through his early days selling marijuana in Florida, right through to his career as the number one cocaine supplier in the US and ending up with him languishing in prison, every aspect of his life is covered here in all it's glory.

    With a life as rich in detail as Jung's, the book could easily have become bogged down in detail, but it's to the writers credit that he never lets the pace flag.

    Highly reccommended.

  • Author was too deep in the trenches to see the big picture.
    By on 1999-01-27
    Having read much finer books on the subject, i.e., "Deep Cover," "C.I.A.: Cocaine In America," Dark Alliance, etc., it was difficult keeping my eyes open while Mr. Porter kept pulling the wool over them. If you want to read about the real war on drugs you must first start with operations Watch Tower and Pseudo Miranda, everything else is just Blowing smoke.

  • a truely great book
    By on 1997-07-06
    This is one of few books that lets you experience the drug smuggling trade from the traffickers point of view. No media hype, no anti-drug message. Just a great story about a smart individual in a rough trade

  • Blow
    By on 2001-12-14
    This was one of the best books I've read - it's like reading about a trainwreck. The author does a wonderful job describing the events like a reporter would. I almost wish there was a sequel...

  • small town boy hits the big time
    By A2M297V5FG6AZ5 on 2002-10-15
    Only in america could a middle class football star become a huge player in bringing cocaine to america. It was amazing the amounts of money that george jung was making to the point that he was placing money in the ventalation ducts he was makinging so much that he had fake ducts installed just to hide money.MAkes you wonder when enough money is enough.This is a good book to read

  • It's okay, the movies better
    By on 2004-01-10
    Like I said, the movies better. This may be the tell-tale truth but you'll find that it is a complete 180 from the movie. If you've seen the movie, you're bound to get confused during the reading. A lot of this book is jumping back and forth, more fact than story-telling. George Jung was definitely a huge player in the cocaine business, though I think he is rather over-rated as a public star. I found myself during this book reading a paragraph three times over but finally going to the next with "this doesn't make sense". A good book in the aspect that it's the true account of the life of George young. If you really want to know about the business and others like it, search elsewhere for detail.

  • Blow
    By A3LK9C2NYVQH39 on 2006-03-01
    The up your nose, in-your-face life of George Jung, the high-school football star from small-town USA who became the American linchpin of the Columbium cocaine cartel. Jung is talked about his earlier years as a poor student, risk taker from a shaky family but the story comes to age as he takes off for California for a haze of sunbathing, sex, pot, and LSD. Soon enough George is arrested and his operation is on hold temporarily. In prison, Jung befriends a young Carlos Lehder and links up with the Medallion cartel, which gross 35 billion in cocaine sales a year. Money, Learjets, fast cars, and very wild women make this story a big success. George Jung did what he considered the best thing he would be at and took it to a level of unknown power. During the 1980's if you snorted cocaine you had an 85% you bought it from him or people he supplied to. I would recommend this book to people that can feel remorse for what a man did only for the reason he was good at it and enjoyed what he did. George Jung lived the American Dream in his own aspect and I will respect him for what he did and what he regrets.

  • EXCELLENT!!!!!!!!!
    By on 1998-06-17
    This is one of the few books I have read more than once. The story is very well written and the pictures are a nice extra detail. Georg Jung is a GOD (and he is still alive too!...amazing, a living legend!)

  • blow(s) up
    By A32HKYMPIT455C on 2001-08-24
    The book Blow was a great story. The story was written well with great detail. The reason i think this is a great book is becuase of the story line the way he runs things the smarts of a young kid trying to make his way up on the food chain. Even if it is in an illegal bussiness the way that he carrys himself with the untouchable attidude is what everyone likes. The fact that it is about selling drugs people think right away it glamorizes the use and sell of drugs but it doesn't it ruins his life and his relationships with others.

  • enjoyable book, bad ending
    By A32IRZ0AWW83KX on 2003-03-31
    I enjoyed reading this book very much. The book starts out with a boy that decides he never wants to be poor. When the boy becomes a teenager he moves out and beigns to sell marijuana. Come to find out he could make a lot more money if he sells marijuana throughout the country. Later in the story he ends getting busted for selling narcotics. His mother disowns him, his wife divorces him, and his daughter hates him. The story is a very good story bit I personallly didn't enjoy the ending. I feel the part in the end when he is making his last deal, just to make some good money to retire with and go to California with his daughter, he should not get busted by the cops. I would have enjoyed the ending better if it would have had George Jung, the main character, in a big beautiful house in California with his daughter. Instead the ending is George in a prison.

  • As my fellow colleague so eloquently put it, "Pizzazz!"
    By on 1999-02-05
    "Blow," a fast and furious romp through the heydays of coke, is likely to give you nose-bleed. But don't go running for your straw just yet. With the 20/20 insight that hindsight provides, I would like to suggest that the author and Mr. Jung's collective noses have grown a bit since penning this non-fiction? Notwithstanding, it is still an interesting, if not warn, story. If you still want to read a story that hindsight has illuminated, not eroded, then read "CIA: Cocaine In America," or "Dark Allinace," especially the former, it will "blow" your socks off!

  • Very interesting and educational
    By on 1997-10-13
    Having been a "good boy" all of my life it was fun to put myself in the shoes of George Jung. I never realized how interesting the cocaine world was. This book led me to buy other books on the cocaine trade of the 80's

  • great book, snowblind even better
    By on 2001-04-23
    i agree with all the above reviewers. this book had good detail about the drug trade and was a riveting story. however, i think snowblind by robert sabbag was even better. Sabbag is a more skilled writer than Porter. Too bad this movie did not turn out as good as the book, but isn't that usually the case?


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