The Theater of Death is a work of nonfiction born from the direct observation of a reality that rarely occupies the center of public debate. Drawing from real experiences, the book reconstructs everyday scenes marked by urban violence, social inequality, and the systematic absence of the state in the most vulnerable communities.
With an approach close to narrative journalism, Willians Luis de Oliveira combines investigation, memory, and testimony to reveal how violence does not arise in isolation, but rather as the result of a fragile social framework in which entire families live under constant pressure and extreme decisions become routine. These are not numbers or statistics, but real people trapped in a system that normalizes exclusion.
The work avoids sensationalism and refuses to glorify crime. Instead, it exposes the structural causes that sustain the cycle of violence: precarious labor conditions, the breakdown of family ties, racism, institutional neglect, and the lack of opportunity. Each chapter offers a critical and human perspective, inviting the reader to understand before judging.
More than recounting tragedies, The Theater of Death proposes an uncomfortable and necessary reflection on collective responsibility in the face of a reality that persists because it is ignored. It is a book that informs, moves, and challenges—intended for those who seek to understand the roots of urban violence without filters or simplifications.
| Número de páginas | 204 |
| Edição | 1 (2026) |
| Formato | A5 (148x210) |
| Acabamento | Brochura c/ orelha |
| Coloração | Preto e branco |
| Tipo de papel | Polen |
| Idioma | Inglês |
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