What Jesse James was to the United States, Lampião was to Brazil, and then some. With a band that at times numbered a hundred or more, this notorious bandit confronted state armies on more
than equal terms and cowed political bosses, virtually dominating large sections of his native northeastern backlands during the 1920s and 1930s. Although Lampião was often brutal and
merciless, his occasional acts of compassion, together with his exploits, have made him a folk figure in Brazil.
Based on contemporary news accounts, archival materials, and extensive interviews by the author, this book presents the first systematic and reliable account of the famed desperado.
Examining Lampião’s career from his boyhood in Pernambuco to his death at Angicos, Chandler sorts fact from fiction and places the bandit in the context of the backlands, where in the early
part of this century becoming acangaceiro (bandit) was as natural and attractive to the son of a tenant or small farmer as taking a degree in law or medicine was for the sons of the
Recife or Salvador elite. Chandler sees Lampião and othercangaceiros as the inevitable products of a lawless society in which frontier conditions reminiscent of the American West
persisted far into the twentieth century.