In contrast to Graham Greene's The Lawless Roads, this work of 1930s travel writing found little favor in its time.[1] One critic called it "polemical in content, rancorous in tone — by much the dreariest of [Waugh's] travel books".[2] However, at least one critic takes the opposite stance, calling it "[The English] language's greatest single traditionalist credo."[3]
Notes
12Kostopulos, Dan S. "Mexico Imagined: Robbery Under Law and the Lessons of Mexican Travel". In Flor, Carlos Villar & Davis, Robert Murray, eds. (2005). Waugh Without End: New Trends in Evelyn Waugh Studies, pp. 116-17. Peter Lang AG.
Waugh, Evelyn. Robbery Under Law: The Mexican Object-Lesson, Chapman and Hall, 1939. Blue cloth hardcover. The Akadine Press, 1999. Blue paperback, A Common Reader Edition.