The Times travel section this weekend included this fine essay on Jorge Amado's beloved Salvador de Bahia.
That kind of dichotomy was typical of Amado, who, especially in his early years, tended to see everything as pairs of opposites: good and evil, black and white, sacred and profane, rich and poor. He even managed to impose that Manichean vision on the geography of Salvador, scorning Rua Chile, then the main commercial street of the upper city, and its well-to-do clientele in favor of the lower city and the port, where sailors, longshoremen, beggars, prostitutes and grifters saturated him in “the greasy black mystery of the city of Salvador da Bahia.”
If you're unfamiliar with Amado, who gets lost in the shadows of Garcia Marquez, Fuentes, and Vargas Llosa, you can read more here.