In 1969, a left leaning military overthrew the democratically elected Peruvian government. One of the aims of the coup was to abolish the hacienda system that controlled large swathes of Peru's best farmland. The confiscated land was divided into peasant owned cooperative societies. Yet, within fifteen years the land reform experiment was over and land ownership fragmented into small peasant holdings. It turned out the great enemies of the cooperatives were the peasants who were suppossed to have owned them. Today, Peru is following the Chilean export agriculture model and the small land parcels are being cobbled together to form large scale, modern commercial farms.There are many ways to tell this story of failed land reform. Enrique Mayer approaches this story with all the tools of an experienced anthropologist. Instead of bogging the reader down with dry charts and statistics, Mayer lets the people who lived through the land reform experiment tell their own stories. "Ugly Stories" follows the lives of ordinary landowners, peasants, administrators and union leaders through what are very memorable times. What makes this approach so interesting is that agrarian reform is broken down into small discrete dramas. We learn the big story by examining the particulars of a much smaller local story."Ugly Stories" is very well written and is a model of story telling. It will appeal to all those interested in Peruvian history and peasant agrarian land reform. I though Mayer's last chapter on the multi-sided struggle to control high mountain pasture lands was especially fascinating. His analysis of a bitter fight between comuneros, Sendero Luminoso, the military and land administrators was riveting and is the best part of the book. This is anthropology at its best and I highly recommend it.