"Deeply researched and vividly written....Paxman has produced a novel and often brilliant analysis of business and politics in modern Mexico....Paxman's interpretation of multiple industries--textiles, film, sugar, banking, philanthropy--is deft, and his research is extraordinarily deep and broad....Paxman has produced a complex, significant biography that provides an essential interpretation of Mexico's modern economic, political, and social institutions."--Susan Gauss, Business History Review
"Jenkins of Mexico is a well-researched, interesting, engaging biography of an enigmatic, conflicted, complex man, who some argue became one of the richest men in Mexico....The author masterfully describes how Jenkins created businesses partnerships in Mexico by striking deals with the Mexican and political elite, simultaneously safeguarding his wealth and avoiding paying taxes in the US. His ventures into Mexican capitalism included sugar plantations and movie theaters. Throughout the text, the author describes how Jenkins's politicking evolved and eventually affected national politics through a loan he made to then future President Manuel Ávila Camacho. This book, rich in details, is highly recommended for serious students of Mexican history and politics. Highly recommended."--CHOICE
"Historian Paxman's exhaustive biography of the enigmatic William O. Jenkins reveals that his life had romance, high adventure, mystery, and (movie) magic...[Jenkins of Mexico] is an impressive accomplishment, and readers interested in the evolution of the modern Mexican state will find a fascinating treasure trove here."--Booklist
"Researched with care and written with verve, Andrew Paxman's highly original study of the long and convoluted life of William Jenkins-entrepreneur, patriarch, philanthropist, and political fixer--is a fascinating read; it also sheds ample light on business and political (mal)practices during the Mexican Revolution and subsequent decades of state-formation and economic growth. For once, a book that manages to combine cogent scholarly research and stylistic flair."--Alan Knight, author of The Mexican Revolution
"No one has shown the life of any other US businessman in such engaging detail during these decades. Through Jenkins's life Andrew Paxman has been able to show very clearly Mexican political and economic development outside of but impinging on Mexico City."--Linda B. Hall, University of New Mexico
"Paxman's masterful biography is the story of an enigmatic American in Mexico. Above all, Jenkins of Mexico demonstrates the chameleon-like character of capital's--and the capitalist's--pursuit of financial and personal rewards wherever they could be found, on farms, in cinema, and in charitable foundations. Given the staggering inequalities of our own times, it's a lesson as valuable today as it was during the days of Jenkins."--Geraldo L. Cadava, author of Standing on Common Ground: The Making of a Sunbelt Borderland
"A wonderful achievement and a path-breaking example of what good biography can achieve. Andrew Paxman's impressively researched study of a hugely influential US businessman is also a rich political and economic history of twentieth-century Mexico. William Jenkins, traditionally caricatured as benevolent hero or imperialist meddler, emerges as a complex and contradictory figure."--Barry Carr, La Trobe University
"Jenkins of Mexico is a well-researched, interesting, engaging biography of an enigmatic, conflicted, complex man, who some argue became one of the richest men in Mexico....This book, rich in details, is highly recommended."--CHOICE
"Magnificent...Paxman has written a work that interweaves the personal and family take of Jenkins with a broad examination of Mexican history from the early 20th century until the 1960s-a remarkable achievement...The book is held together by its systematic analysis of the shifting relationships between government and business, and between political power and capital in the context of the Mexican revolution and the changes it produced in subsequent decades...Thoroughly researched, this book is written with outstanding elegance, skill, and persuasion. Jenkins of Mexico is both a major history of state-business relations during the first half of the 20th century and a superb biography."--Wil G. Pansters, European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies
"Andrew Paxman has written the definitive account of William Jenkins-often considered the richest man in mid-twentieth century Mexico. Paxman's lengthy biography is extensively investigated and...this, combined with Paxman's spirited writing style, makes for a compelling read that will engage scholars interested in modern Mexico, bilateral relations, and the evolution of capitalism in the developing world...The interdependent relationship between big business and the Mexican government enabled both sides to get what they wanted, often at the expense of Mexico's working poor despite revolutionary rhetoric to the contrary...In recent years, as Mexico democratized, and the shortcomings of the Revolution are more readily admitted, critical views of Jenkins have softened and a more balanced portrayal of this complex figure has emerged. Paxman's excellent biography of Jenkins is at the forefront of this important historical revision."--John J. Dwyer, Diplomatic History