2019/01/10

Cuba: Between Reform and Revolution Louis A. Pérez: Books



Amazon.com: Cuba: Between Reform and Revolution (9780199301447): Louis A. Pérez: Books





ISBN-13: 978-0199301447
ISBN-10: 0199301441Why is ISBN important?
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Editorial Reviews

Review



"This is the best overview of the modern history of Cuba. Pérez is the most informed and articulate scholar of Cuba in the world, as far as I am concerned."--Dale Graden, University of Idaho



"Pérez has a deep knowledge of the subject matter and moves easily from one historical period to the next. The text is very effective because of Perez's easy-to-follow narrative, meticulous knowledge of Cuban affairs, and engaging style."--Jorge Chimea, Wayne State University

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About the Author

Louis A. Pérez, Jr., is J. Carlyle Sitterson Professor of History at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is the author of Cuba in the American Imagination (2008), On Becoming Cuban (2007), and The War of 1898 (1998).
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Product details

Paperback: 496 pages
Publisher: Oxford University Press; 5 edition (October 7, 2014)




13 customer reviews

3.6 out of 5 stars
3.6 out of 5 stars

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C.P.M.

3.0 out of 5 starsA Decent Starting PointMay 6, 2015
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase

Cuba is one of those countries that everyone in America knows about, but really doesn't know anything about. This book does a solid job of laying out the history of the largest island in the Caribbean starting with a short chapter on its geography and Pre-Columbian tribes through the colonial period and the Revolution of 1959 and ending at around 2013. This fifth edition was published in 2014, which means it doesn't cover the most recent changes in Cuba's relations with the United States, but it does take a long look at the changes Raul Castro has been putting in place since his brother, Fidel, stepped down from power in 2006. In fact it takes too long a look. One of the problems of this book is that as it gets closer to the present the author tends to stuff more into each chapter, going from a first chapter of 15 pages in length to a last chapter of 50+ pages. Normally, this would't be a problem, but the other stumbling block of this book is that it takes a holistic rather than a narrative approach to the topic. What I mean is that each chapter is subdivided by Roman numerals and each subdivision tackles some aspect of the period the chapter is covering, usually in a chronological manner, but most of the time bouncing around the period. It reminded me a lot of the way George R.R. Martin writes his A Song of Ice and Fire books as this author is trying to capture how a lot of different things are going on at once. That means that you have to keep track of what else is happening and when and where. It can be confusing to follow at times, but I suppose that that is because this book was written for a university-class audience, not for popular consumption. Still, this is a rather good look at both the length and depth of Cuban history and I would recommend it as a good starting point for anyone who is interested in learning more about the history of the island.
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E. Campisi

5.0 out of 5 starsTHE Historian of CubaOctober 13, 2006
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase

As an anthropologist, I found this book an invaluable introduction to Cuban history, and I would certainly use it as a text for undergraduates.

Perez starts with Cuba's geography and a quick review of its pre-Columbian peoples, and ends with Cuba in the Post-Cold War World. The book is readable and concise, and gave me insights into U.S. designs on Cuba that began with our second President. Perez goes through Cuba's history in extricating itself from Spain only to be dominated by the U.S., and then gives a very good account of Cuba under its various presidents up until the Revolution. His account of the Revolution and its roots is dispassionate and unbiased, though it won't seem like that to right-wing exiles who would like to see everything about Castro totally demonized.

I disagree with other reviewers that the role of the U.S. is not included. It certainly is. With 329 pages, you can't go into extreme depth on all topics to everyone's tastes, but I for one was surprised by how old U.S. ambitions toward the island are. If you want to get into Cuba-U.S. relations in more depth get Perez' book "Ties of Singular Intimacy."

This third edition is an updated version that includes events in the exile community up to 2004, and includes a nice political chronology at the end, along with a 75 page guide to the literature. Make sure you get this one and not the older edition if you want an updated history. The older edition is blue with a white stripe across the middle. You can get the other one used here on Amazon for cheap if you don't need to go past 1996.

THIS is the book to read on Cuba if you want to get a thorough idea about its history without making the commitment necessary to read Hugh Thomas' book, which is about 1400 pages, or longer collected volumes.
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Amazon Customer

5.0 out of 5 starsThe #1 Book on CubaJuly 19, 2017
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase

The best source for research on Cuba. Fantastic read for its information and superior writing style. 10/10 would recommend to all interested in learning about Cuba from an unbiased perspective.



Jose G. Perez

5.0 out of 5 starsThis is an authoritative work from a respected academicSeptember 23, 2011
Format: Paperback
At least two reviews have been posted recently claiming Professor Perez is wrong about the facts he offers on social and economic conditions in Cuba before the victory of the revolution in 1959. I have placed a comment under the more extensive of the two challenges, but I want to alert others who may not look at the comments to the reviews, that in general, but especially on Cuba and its revolution, a subject on which feelings run very deep, a challenge to factual material presented by a leading academic expert such as Professor Perez (no relation to this writer) cannot be credited unless the source is given, and preferably a reliable or authoritative source that can be independently verified.

In this case, the author of the longer challenge writes with such assertiveness and specific detail that I imagined I was reading first hand testimony from someone who was there, although the reviewer doesn't say that. Even then, on Cuba, such accounts need to be taken with a grain of salt and the person should be encouraged to provide authoritative or reliable and verifiable sources to corroborate at least the overall picture they are presenting if not all the specific details.

But as it turns out, in the case of the comment that challenges Professor Perez so vigorously, it comes from someone whose profile page has another review where he makes it clear he was born in 1973. He is in his 30s, but he'd need to be well past retirement age to know from personal experience the assertions he makes challenging Professor Perez on the facts about Cuba in the late 1950s. Yet the critic provided no sources.

Among many of us Cuban emigres (and our descendants) a myth has developed that I would caricature as, "Nothing was wrong with Cuba before 1959; nothing has been right ever since." But that is more a reflection of the depth of feeling about the Cuban Revolution from those who were negatively impacted than a true portrait of what the island was then and what has happened since. (And feelings run just as deeply on the other side, too.)

As the late Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan said, "Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts." Professor Perez's record and standing in the academic community makes his book authoritative. I would completely discount those kinds of negative reviews claiming the book is inaccurate until and unless they are backed up with sources.

4 people found this helpful

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Jorge1027

4.0 out of 5 starsGreat book of Cuban History with some minor suggestionsNovember 6, 2011
Format: Paperback
Covering almost 4 centuries of history even of a small country as Cuba is a daunting task. Perez, however, does a wonderful job in making a succinct and clear overview of the general narratives that have shaped the island. Beginning with a brief introduction to the native population of the island before the Spanish discovery of Taino and Ciboney tribes to the present years of the revolution. What I think was important was how the author provided a geographical overview of the island so as the reader can become acquainted with the territory. While for many Cubans this may not be necessary for those with little or even just some knowledge of Cuba this preliminary step is extremely helpful. I enjoyed this book most of all because it gives a narrative to each historical epoch. From the bleak beginnings of Cuba as a country that was depopulated over and over as more Spaniards moved to the Spanish colonial mainland to how and why Havana was able to grow as an important city for Spanish interests. Again because the author cannot cover everything many will criticize that he missed this or that. Personally my biggest surprise was that he didn't mentioned the events that lead to the Spanish-American War. He does extensively note the long history of U.S. intentions to annex Cuba. But the explosion of the Maine and the events leading to the U.S. occupation are not mentioned at all. With respects to keeping a bias opinion and the accuracy of his evidence...well with regards to all the modern developments (i.e. 2000-present) the author is quite accurate and he does give a succinct and clear idea of the main events. With respect to the Pre-1959 I cannot attest for much. The author at least does try, so it seems, to a keep a non-biased view throughout his book. He neither staunchly praises the Revolution nor demonizes. He notes its few achievements and its key problems. The author does note how Cuba is one of the most developed economies in Latin America by 1958 in comparison to most Latin American countries on many levels including # of radios, televions, literacy, infant mortality etc. At the same time, this doesn't mean that there aren't many problems with Cuban society before 1959 there are and A LOT. And the author does keep note of these. Some things I would like to have seen mentioned were key public works of Havana i.e. The Capitolio built under the Machado administration, the Hotel Nacional build in 1930 and most importantly Habana Libre, Riviera. These last were built just a year or 2 prior to the Revolution I would like to see more in depth economic analysis of these years preceding the Revolution. Despite these minor setbacks I think Perez has done an astonishing job and hope to read other books by him

2 people found this helpful

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AMD

4.0 out of 5 starsCuba, from A to ZJuly 1, 2004
Format: Paperback
This is a history book, wonderfully thorough, that unfortunately at times takes on the disguise of a dozen monographs torn apart and chronologically slapped back together into one volume. It is an appropriate jumping-off point for further study of Cuba.
What Perez presents in Cuba: Between Reform and Revolution is a book that few students of Cuban history can write: it is unbiased. My political and emotional perspective on Cuba is strong and personal, yet try as I may, the two times I've read this book, I did not ever find it tarnished by the rhetoric of propagandists.
I recommend this book to teachers and professors searching for a complete and honest history of Cuba for classroom use, and to independent students and learners who really want a strong background knowledge on the long history of Cuba.

10 people found this helpful

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Damon Jasperson

4.0 out of 5 starsA good internal political history of Cuba.April 8, 2000
Format: Paperback
Louis Perez has written a good history of internal political developments in Cuba from Columbus to Castro. What is missing, however, is the role of the U.S.; Perez almost totally ignores it. He has a separate volume dealing with U.S.-Cuban relations, but it still seems that more should have been included in this one. Perhaps Perez views Cuban events as just that: purely Cuban with outside influences mattering little.

6 people found this helpful

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Pichon: Race and Revolution in Castro's Cuba: A Memoir: Carlos Moore, Maya Angelou: 9781556527678: Amazon.com: Books



Pichon: Race and Revolution in Castro's Cuba: A Memoir: Carlos Moore, Maya Angelou: 9781556527678: Amazon.com: Books






Carlos Moore
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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly


Moore's Jamaican parents immigrated to Cuba in search of a better life, but the author's own search took him from Cuba, where black skin and African features were despised, to the United States, where Negroes were rich and famous and powerful, and on to peripatetic global travels. He was present at historic moments around the world but oddly, takes a lackadaisical approach (in February 1960, four black students initiated what was thereafter called a sit-in... in March, the massacre of unarmed black protestors... in South Africa brought the term apartheid into my vocabulary). Moore's prose is uncommonly bland and wooden, though startling images surface occasionally; details of his teenaged sexual obsession with white women (the ultimate conquest for me) and details of his bureaucratic encounters are overdrawn. Moore's passion to reveal that Castro's limitations on the questions of race were glaring from the start is buried under too much self-absorption. According to Moore, Alex Haley told him, It's one hell of a story.... You must write a book. Perhaps in Haley's hands, Moore's story might have gained the clarity of focus and freshness of voice it lacks. (Nov.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Review



"Moore has written an astounding book about revolution, resistance, passion, and compassion . . . an irresistibly human tale." —Maya Angelou, from the Foreword




"Carlos Moore delves deeply into his own life to show us what is wrong—and right—with our world and our place in it. Read and marvel, but also read and learn." —Edwidge Danticat, author, Brother, I'm Dying


"Pichón is . . . a story of romance and revolution, disillusionment, discovery, and the long journey into a mature political consciousness and pride in self, told by a man I greatly admire." —Susan L. Taylor, editorial director, Essence magazine




"A masterpiece . . . an elegantly written account of the domestic and international intrigue that flows from Moore's pursuit of racial justice in the shadow of the cold war. . . . This autobiography [is] an illuminating social history of the period." —Claudia Mitchell-Kernan, vice chancellor, graduate studies, and dean, graduate division, UCLA


"Revealing the most pivotal moments of the 20th century with fervor and poignancy . . . a devestating yet redemptive account of one man's battles with racism, revolution and resistance, and his uplifting fight for justice, all of which raise consciousness about the human condition." —HavanaJournal.com


"Refreshing . . . a personal context through which to interpret the ins and outs of [Cuba's] politics." —popmatters.com


"Engaging autobiography . . . vivid descriptions . . . frankly depicted . . . uplifting." —joemadison.com


"A compelling autobiography. . . particularly timely." —Sundaypaper.com


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Product details

Hardcover: 395 pages
Publisher: Chicago Review Press; First Edition edition (November 1, 2008)
Language: English


13 customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5 stars



Showing 1-8 of 13 reviews
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Amazon Customer

5.0 out of 5 starsFive StarsJanuary 9, 2017
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase

One of the most memorable books, I had the pleasure of reading in college during my undergraduate studies.


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Motisola

5.0 out of 5 starsFive StarsOctober 11, 2017
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase

Excellent read.


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Nubianman

4.0 out of 5 starsDisclosing the "race" issue in Communist CubaJanuary 10, 2010
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase

Greetings, for once an individual besides myself, has shed light on the so-called issue of "race" in pre and (as well as) presently in Communist Cuba.

Dr. Moore, has disclosed [in this book] the issue of race and it's inequities that reside on the island where many "so-called" white and mulattos liberals Cubans, fail or hide to disclose the issue. I, myself (Cuban-born), described as an African Caribbean of cinnamon-brown hue, and as Africancentric Cultural Nationalist, knows of the veiled racism or the arrogance of many Cubans have towards their darker co-denizens. And although, Fidel or Raul and company, have have testified that, 'racism in Communist Cuba, does not exist." The venom of racism, either, has subsided or has never gone away, totally.

Dr. Moore, has written about his youth and post-pubescent years living in Cuba and took an issue that had to be dealt since ther Batista administartion and prior. He also writes of his epiphany of his Africanness, while in NY which shed his intelligence to view pride of his "blackness" as well as of/and about the
presences of African heros & sheroes (not Spaniards, Afro Latino/Latin. Or, Afro/Black Hispanic), in the Caribbean.

This book, should be translated into the various European languages of Spanish, French, etc.,. But mainly, many African descedant Cubans, should read this book, and take solidarity with their African descedants through the Diaspora of the race issue still existing within this Western hemisphere.

Thank you, Ali Abdul Perez
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S.johnson

5.0 out of 5 starsGreat bookFebruary 18, 2014
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase

It arrived in brand new condition.
It was a great book because his life was that interesting. Look at ones destiny by circumstance.
Fascinating.


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A working dialectologist

5.0 out of 5 starsFive StarsOctober 18, 2015
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase

Excellent, excelente!!!!!


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D. Dorsey

5.0 out of 5 starsEye Opening Account of Racism in CubaMarch 18, 2009
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase

I am African American and had an idealized view of Cuba. This was eye-opening. I would not have imagined that this much racism went on in Cuba. The writter's account of his own self hatred was unusually truthful and detailed. It read like a novel and was very enlightening.

6 people found this helpful

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mamadou badiane

3.0 out of 5 starsRaceless Cuba: just a mythNovember 9, 2013
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase

I found this book very interesting because of the direct knowledge the author has about Cuban racial problems; however, it might seem too subjective from time to time.


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Rafael

5.0 out of 5 starsFive StarsNovember 3, 2014
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase

Fantastic journey about Cuba Revolution!


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Child of the Revolution: Growing up in Castro's Cuba: Luis M. Garcia: 9781741148527: Amazon.com: Books

Child of the Revolution: Growing up in Castro's Cuba: Luis M. Garcia: 9781741148527: Amazon.com: Books




Compelling and vivid, this memoir presents an intimate portrait of Castro’s Cuba through a wide-eyed and eager boy growing up in the 1960s. At the naïve age of 10, Luis M. Garcia, embarrassed by his anti-revolutionary parents, pledges his allegiance to Lenin, Marx, and the mythical Che Guevara, knowing that this is the only path to become a better revolutionary—and to get out of school early. Told with a detailed intimacy and a gentle humor that conveys the richness and warmth of Cuban life, this memoir illuminates the uncertainty, fear, and political force that tore families apart as Castro sought to destroy capitalism and establish Cuba as a world superpower






Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly


Born in 1959, journalist Garcia spent his first 12 years in Cuba, plenty of time to pile up grievances against the Communist regime. His parents owned a small haberdashery whose business dried up with the gradual suppression of commerce after the revolution, until it was taken over by the state. When his parents applied to emigrate, his father was sent to a labor camp to cut sugar cane, and the family was meticulously divested of their belongings before being allowed to leave. Garcia's is an emblematic story of the dispossession and exile of Cuba's middle class, leavened with bittersweet reminiscences of his warmly convivial extended family, which comprised both Communist officials and disaffected partisans of the prerevolutionary past. As well, it's a study of the downside of Cuba's revolution—skimpy food rations, endless queues for shoddy goods, beady-eyed busybodies in the neighborhood Committee for the Defense of the Revolution, all justified by strident propaganda in the classroom and media. Garcia's rancorous score-settling with communism can be intrusive; "it's not a very revolutionary thing to do, but... even communists need toilet paper," he gloats about a common unauthorized use for the works of Lenin. But he does offer an intriguing corrective to romanticized accounts of socialist Cuba. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist


Garcia was 12 years old in 1971 when his family at last received permission to leave Castro's Cuba, and in a series of immediate, present-tense, first-person vignettes, he tells how it was from the child's bewildered viewpoint. He remembers the idiocy of the indoctrination (he wants to be "a good little communist," but his parents are not good revolutionaries, and that scares him); the hardship when his father is sent to labor camp to cut sugarcane for nearly three years; the boredom of Castro's speeches (six hours without even a toilet break). The kid wants to listen to the Beatles, not revolutionary songs, and his idea of summer camp is not picking lemons for the revolution. His sharp childhood memories are mixed with adult commentary. Looking back now, the propaganda feels "Orwellian," and being forced to leave his close-knit extended family remains painful. All the detail sometimes gets repetitive, but the young boy's coming-of-age brings the forced-immigration story up close. Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reservedSee all Editorial Reviews


Product details

Paperback: 248 pages
Publisher: Allen & Unwin; 1st Printing edition (April 1, 2007)
Language: English


10 customer reviews

4.9 out of 5 stars
4.9 out of 5 stars

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FJP

5.0 out of 5 starsLife of a Cuban middle class child in the early years of the revolutionJuly 4, 2018
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase

I left Cuba in 1960 at age 11. Luis left when he was 13, in 1972. Reading his experiences as a child growing up in Castro's Cuba gave me a glimpse at what my life could have been like had my parents had decided to stay instead of leaving when we did.

Leaving was a bureaucratic and logistic ordeal. Once you announced you were leaving everyone in the family was ostracized by the regime. Luis' father had to spend 3 years in compulsory agricultural work far away from his family. Because they were from Banes, they had to travel to Havana to catch their flight. Breakdowns of these buses were commonplace, so they left Banes a few days earlier. They had to find someone who would put them up for a few days before leaving. His uncle, a high ranking official in the Cuban government had the means to do it, but could not do it for fear it might get him in trouble with his superiors. They ended up in uncomfortable quarters thanks to the generosity of another family member. On the day they were scheduled to leave, they were told "there were no seats on the plane." Up to the time when they were scheduled to leave, they were in fear the government might find a reason to stop their departure.

One person found this helpful

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LRR

5.0 out of 5 starsAn eye-opening book.October 8, 2018
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase

If only high school and college students could be required to read this book for a history or literature class. The Cuban revolution is seen through the eyes of a child who saw his once wealthy country reduced to poverty. People had to stand in line for food where there had been an abundance before. His parents lost their small business. His father was forced into years of servitude when he applied to emigrate. And worst of all, "the Americans had taken all the hairspray with them."


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Francisco "Paco" Sabin, Author, Around the World in 70 Years

5.0 out of 5 starsChild of the RevolutionAugust 21, 2012
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase

I am a Cuban-American who has just published my own memoir, and an avid reader of books by Cubans who were impacted by the Castro Revolution in their childhoods. Luis Garcia's took is extraordinary, and he captures his family's difficult passage in the Revolution's turbulent first decade with great humor and heart warming sincerity. I found it particularly interesting to see developments from the perspective of a "guajirito" in Banes. As I wrote in my autobiography, Cuba lost most of its best people in a Revolution that brought so much pain to all Cubans: Luis is one of many of these children now writing about their journeys, and I will ensure that my entire family reads this excellent book. It will help them understand the challenges many encountered to flee their tropical "paradise."

2 people found this helpful

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Sema

5.0 out of 5 starsReminiscesMarch 12, 2010
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase

This was a wonderful book to read as it so vividly described the feelings I too had as a child fleeing from Cuba.
My family were there as dad was working for Philips and after the company was nationalized we had to 'take' a 'pretend holiday' to Dutch Guiana in order to escape.
We too literally left with the clothes we were wearing!
It was great to read what actually happened in Cuba during and after the time we left, written from the perspective of a child.

2 people found this helpful

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B.E.

5.0 out of 5 starsWELL-WRITTEN, and VERY ENJOYABLEJuly 7, 2009
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase

I loved reading this book! It's well-written, engaging, and an easy read. The author wrote it from the point of view of a child, as the title suggests, but he is an excellent writer, so the finished product appeals to adults who are seeking a different perspective on life in Castro's Cuba. Having just toured in Cuba, I was especially interested in getting an inside viewpoint, and the author did not disappoint.

4 people found this helpful

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WomenOnGuard

5.0 out of 5 starsA sincere, funny & sad autobiographic must read!January 27, 2011
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase

This book reads like a friend sitting next to you, telling you his childhood experiences. Accurate information about families living in Cuba at the time. Ironic, heartwarming incidents and thoughts and worries that ran through this child's mind while the island of Cuba was controlled by Fidel Castro. I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in knowing how it was in Cuba. Unfortunately very little has changed since then...

One person found this helpful

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Gus Venegas

5.0 out of 5 starsGarcia's Child of the RevolutionJune 5, 2010
Format: Paperback

This book is by Cuban Australian author Luis Garcia, who tells us of his family and of his coming of age under the first few years of the Revolution in Banes, a small rural town in eastern Cuba. Although lacking a perspective of life before Castro coming to power in 1959, the author tells his story in a colorful and humorous way. His description of a communist's relative winning an apparently rigged beauty contest is hilarious. The fear of been set up for a black market buy of pork meat from a government soldier is evident. His narrative of his parents losing their mom and pop tailoring business in 1968 is painful. Life after that seems to get harder as his parents become government employees at the newly confiscated industries of Cuba, whether mom sorting coffee beans or dad at a factory. Garcia goes on to describe the last few months before leaving Cuba for Spain (later to Australia), when his dad was required to be an agricultural worker for plantation master Castro prior to exiting Cuba. I found the book easy to read, enjoyable, and descriptive of life by a typical family in Castro's Cuba. It was one of thirty plus books I read prior to publishing my own (Memories from the Land of the Intolerant Tyrant) and I found it interesting, humorous, and informative about life in Castro's Cuba.

2 people found this helpful

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Henry L. Gomez

5.0 out of 5 starsExcellent Companion to Waiting for Snow in HavanaFebruary 28, 2007
Format: Paperback

Luis M. Garcia is a gifted Cuban-Australian (you read that correctly, Cuban-Australian not Cuban-American) author. In his book Child of the Revolution we see what it was like to grow up in the 60s in Cuba. Since it's told from the perspective of a young boy, the story is reminiscent of the excellent book "Waiting for Snow in Havana" by Carlos Eire. Where the books are different is that Eire saw the changes from pre-Revolutionary Cuba to Revolutionary Cuba and describes them in great detail. Garcia, on the other hand, was born in 1959, the same year Castro took power, and thus had no knowledge of that pre-Castro Cuba other than what his parents told him. In fact Garcia describes that period in his life as "a battle between Castro and my parents for the mind of an 11 year old." With this book and his blog Luis M. Garcia proves that Castro's critics aren't just in Miami. Cubans have been scattered around the globe thanks to Castro's brutal dictatorship.

Highly recommended.

17 people found this helpful

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Robin
Sep 05, 2010rated it did not like it
A mostly imagined memior by a conservative. He imagines what thoughts and decisions his parents made - strange that in his lifetime they never told him about the pivotal events of his family's life or that he never asked, leaving him to imagine what an official might have said to his father about migrating to Australia and so on. Even more incredible given that Garcia also became a journalist, before a political advisor to a conservative politician. Even at this stage Garcia could have shown the manuscript to his parents and corrected imaginings with actual memories and events. He doesn't. It is impossible to believe he is unaware of what his parents might have told him, and the fact he never once cites them for a single conversation or incident, suggests his main purpose is not to relate a truthful account but fabricate a fictional narrative that serves his conservative and agenda. It's obvious in fact.

His critique of Castro's Cuba is undermined by his numerous "imaginings" in place of actual conversations and events and his constant snide remarks. If one is already a Castro hater, such comments may need no explanation, but if you are reading the book to gain some insight then these comments are just plain irritating.

There are glimpses of real life - some memories of school - which ring true and which he could have used more to bolster his critique, but I think Garcia tries to turn a memoir of a boy into an adult political critique, but relies on cold war cliches in place of research. It's reduced to a conservative preaching to fellow conservatives; Castro is bad, communism is bad, Lenin is bad, the Russians are bad - and I know because I can IMAGINE what my parents thought, though I never actually asked them. 
(less)
Vladimir
Feb 16, 2018rated it it was ok
As far as its documentary value goes, I gave it two stars (literary value is non-existent). Entertainment value - three stars. It's obviously written by an anti-Castrist and it this sense it's actually a more balanced portrayal of the early revolutionary years than I expected and that many other books written by members of the Cuban emigration offer. Why only two stars, then? Well, whereas I found it interesting to read because it was written from a child's perspective, this is precisely why it's unreliable as a document of the times. Another reviewer point out that most of it is imagined, and in a sense I agree - the author attributes a lot of opinions and beliefs to his parents and through how he sees them, he tells much of the story of the changes that took place after 1959. Whereas I enjoyed reading it, I would never judge Cuban society pre- or post-1959 by the information, fantasies and tales told in this book. To give an example - there is an episode near the beginning that touches on flagrant racism of pre-revolutionary Cuba told almost as an anecdote. On the other hand, other forms of oppression post-1959 are not as funny to the author. (less)
Filip
Nov 05, 2018rated it really liked it
Zanimljiva knjiga sa dosta interesantih informacija o Kubi pisana kroz oči deteta od 10-tak godina. Književni stil je slab pa zato dajem slabu četvorku, ali simpatično i humoristički opisuje život pod Fidelom.
Augusto Venegas
Apr 24, 2018rated it really liked it
This book is by Cuban Australian author Luis Garcia, who tells us of his family and of his coming of age under the first few years of the Revolution in Banes, a small rural town in eastern Cuba. Although lacking a perspective of life before Castro coming to power in 1959, the author tells his story in a colorful and humorous way. His description of a communist's relative winning an apparently rigged beauty contest is hilarious. The fear of been set up for a black market buy of pork meat from a government soldier is evident. His narrative of his parents losing their mom and pop tailoring business in 1968 is painful. Life after that seems to get harder as his parents become government employees at the newly confiscated industries of Cuba, whether mom sorting coffee beans or dad at a factory. Garcia goes on to describe the last few months before leaving Cuba for Spain (later to Australia), when his dad was required to be an agricultural worker for plantation master Castro prior to exiting Cuba. I found the book easy to read, enjoyable, and descriptive of life by a typical family in Castro's Cuba. It was one of thirty plus books I read prior to publishing my own (Memories from the Land of the Intolerant Tyrant) and I found it interesting, humorous, and informative about life in Castro's Cuba. (less)
Margie
Nov 17, 2007rated it it was amazing
I was impressed at how vividly Luis Garcia brought the Cuba of his childhood to life. And also by how skillfully he balanced the knowledge he has as an adult authoring this tale with the naivity and innocence he possessed as the child depicted in this book.

I only wish there was a second volume, to continue the story of his family as they deal with their new life as Cuban refugees first in Spain and then later in Australia.
Julian Gallo
Aug 08, 2008rated it really liked it
A very interesting look at a childhood in post-revolutionary Cuba. Written from a boyhood perspective. Interesting in a historical way as well and shines a light on what actually happened there, dispels any myths people may have as well. A great read.
Lauren Strickland
Jun 26, 2016rated it really liked it
A very informative read which provided me with a deeper insight into life under Castro's communist rule, told through the eyes of a child.

Leanne Costantino
May 11, 2009rated it liked it
Really easy reading. It's a 12 year olds view of growing in Cuba and becoming a good little Revolutionary. Kim I will post it to you if you want something to flick though on a lazy Saturday arvo?












2019/01/09

Shopping Cart / Cheap-Library.com



Shopping Cart / Cheap-Library.com







Cuba: Between Reform and Revolution (Latin American Histories) by Louis A. Pérez Jr. $4.56 $4.56

Dark green religion : nature spirituality and the planetary future by Taylor, Bron Raymond $4.59 $4.59

Cuba: Between Reform and Revolution (Latin American Histories) / Cheap-Library.com

Cuba: Between Reform and Revolution (Latin American Histories) / Cheap-Library.com



Cuba: Between Reform and Revolution (Latin American Histories)

Louis A. Pérez Jr.


Spanning the history of the island from pre-Columbian times to the present, this highly acclaimed survey examines Cuba's political and economic development within the context of its international relations and continuing struggle for self-determination. The dualism that emerged in Cuban ideology--between liberal constructs of patria and radical formulations of nationality--is fully investigated as a source of both national tension and competing notions of liberty, equality, and justice. P?rez integrates local and provincial developments with issues of class, race, and gender to give readers a full and fascinating account of Cuba's history, focusing on its struggle for nationality. This third edition features the latest research on Cuba, including a new chapter on post-Cold War Cuba that covers the years 1995 through 2004. The political chronology has been revised and updated and the extensive bibliography has been both condensed, where necessary, and expanded to highlight the scholarship of the past decade. The book now features photographs throughout and five maps.
$4.56 (USD)
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Release date: 2005
Format: PDF
Size: 5.09 MB
Language: English
Pages: 461

Rose T. Caraway • Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies • Iowa State University



Rose T. Caraway • Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies • Iowa State University



Rose T. Caraway

Assistant Professor [PH RS]
Contact
Dept: Philosophy & Religious Studies
Email: rcaraway@iastate.edu
Office: 411 Catt
2224 Osborn Dr
Ames IA
50011-4009
Phone: 515-294-3638
Links: Website

BioI am a scholar of religion and society in Cuba, with a focus on agroecology and environmental ethics. I earned my PhD in Religion at the University of Florida in 2011, and I arrived at Iowa State in 2014 after having taught at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff.

Research Areas
Religion and Environmental Ethics; Deep Ecology; Religion in Latin America and the Caribbean; Cuban Studies

Education
PhD University of Florida (2011)
BA University of Texas (2003)

Courses Taught
Introduction to World Religions
Introduction to Religion
Religions of Latin America
Indigenous Religions
Christianity
Contemporary Christian Thought
Comparative Cultural Studies

Selected Publications


“On Earth as it is in Heaven: the Protestant House Church Phenomenon in post-Soviet Cuba,” Journal of Religion and Society (forthcoming).

Selected Presentations
“Seeds of Hope: Permaculture Ethics and Agroecology in Cuba.”
• Upper Midwest American Academy of Religion Regional Meeting. St. Paul, Minnesota. April 17-18, 2015.

“La permacultura como forma de ecología profunda: la creación de una cultura de naturaleza” (Permaculture as a form of deep ecology: the creation of a culture of nature).
• 10th Biannual International Conference on Environmental Protection and Sustainable Development. Havana, Cuba. July 3rd-12th, 2015.

“We are the Solution: Religion and Environmental Ethics in Cuba.”
• Western American Academy of Religion Regional Meeting. Los Angeles, California. March 7-9, 2014.

“Navigating Which Field? The Future of Religious Studies and its Impact on Graduate Training.”
• Western American Academy of Religion Regional Meeting. Los Angeles, California. March 7-9, 2014.


Additional Information
When I’m not teaching and writing, I’m traveling to Cuba. I enjoy community choir, hiking, exploring nature, organic gardening, and chasing my non-human companions (Emma the Chihuahua/Italian-Greyhound mix, and Opie the Italian Greyhound).

Antonio Núñez Jiménez - Wikipedia



Antonio Núñez Jiménez - Wikipedia



Antonio Núñez Jiménez
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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For other uses, see Antonio Núñez.

Leads of the memorial march in Havana on 5 May 1960, for the victims of the La Coubre freight ship explosion (Jimenez: right)

Antonio Núñez Jiménez (April 20, 1923 – September 13, 1998) was a Cuban revolutionary and academic.

Núñez was born in Alquízar, Havana Province. In 1950, he received his first doctorate from the University of Havana, and later received a second doctorate from the Lomonosov Moscow State University of Moscow. In 1954, he authored Geography of Cuba, that replaced Levi Marrero’s Geografía de Cuba as a standard educational text in Cuba.

With Che Guevara and his daughter Hilda, 4 years old, in 1960.

Núñez served as captain in the revolutionary forces of Che Guevara. After former rebel commander Humberto Sorí Marin was executed in April 1961, he took over the position of Minister of Agrarian Reform.
Death[edit]

Núñez died on September 13, 1998. His work is highly respected in Cuban government circles.

References[edit]
Núñez Jiménez, Antonio, 1959, Geografía de Cuba. Lex. Havana.
Marrero, Levi, 1981, 5th edition "Geografía de Cuba" La Moderna Poesía, Coral Gables Florida.