Caribbean Books
Related Subjects: Jamaica
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the heart of NerudaReview Date: 2003-04-12
So BeautifulReview Date: 2005-02-04
An excellent gift to one that you love passionately.
Powerfull and sensitiveReview Date: 2002-11-25
Pablo es capaz de modelar como nadie las imagenes y meterte en un libro tan hermoso y poderoso. "La muerta" es un claro ejemplo de la belleza y la fuerza de su poesÃa.
Sensual masterpiecesReview Date: 2007-01-10
The most beloved book of poetry that I ownReview Date: 2002-12-31


Great Memories of Tahiti!Review Date: 2008-01-06
Let's go!Review Date: 2008-03-27
Great book!Review Date: 2007-11-05
What a fun and entertaining book!Review Date: 2007-08-05
We love to entertain and it has been great having 'Cocktails in Tahiti' out at our parties...quite a conversation piece! Everyone loves the stunning photos of Tahiti, the scrumptious drinks, and the intriguing facts of the islands. Thank you!
Experience a whole new world of Cocktails!Review Date: 2007-04-28
The photos are exceptional and each drink I have mixed has been better than the last. I have bought several as gifts for coworkers and friends. You won't be disappointed!

Used price: $7.49

from THE ATLANTA JOURNAL, THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTIONReview Date: 1996-06-19
from BOOKLIST, The American Library AssociationReview Date: 1996-06-19
Nice, new perspectiveReview Date: 2000-06-12
by CHARLES LARSON in THE WASHINGTON POSTReview Date: 1996-06-19
from VILLAGE VIEWReview Date: 1996-06-19

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Collectible price: $40.00

Best Photography Book in my CollectionReview Date: 2008-07-21
Beautiful but a little uneven.Review Date: 2007-06-06
interesting picturesReview Date: 2006-02-23
Cuba and magical picturesReview Date: 2007-01-16
BeautifulReview Date: 2006-01-20


Great Book!!Review Date: 2004-04-14
St. Barts In Our HomeReview Date: 2004-04-14
Debby Best
Uncovering the Soul of St. Barth'sReview Date: 2004-04-14
Paradise Found INDEED!Review Date: 2004-04-14
Paradise Indeed!Review Date: 2004-04-14

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Collectible price: $39.95

This Book is a Family FavoriteReview Date: 2008-07-07
Great ReferenceReview Date: 2008-01-21
Great book, but 2nd ed. and not the 3rd!Review Date: 2007-10-05
Awesome guide!Review Date: 2007-07-19
interesting and educationalReview Date: 2007-05-23

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There is a zen-like quality to Neruda's poemsReview Date: 2006-04-27
The images are surreal, as if a Dali painting put to words. Further thought (and the poems ARE thought provoking) yields a different answer with each reading. There is a pervading sense of sadness to them, perhaps because Neruda was dying of cancer while he wrote them; but there is hope, here, too - and a wisdom that only a master poet can communicate. For example:
Where is the child I was,
still inside me or gone?
Why did we spend so much time
growing up only to seperate?
Neruda's _Book of Questions_ haunts and provokes, much like life itself. Highly recommended.
The World Through QuestionsReview Date: 2003-01-21
My favorite questions include:
Why do leaves commit suicide
When they feel yellow?
and
When the convict ponders the light
is it the same light that shines on you?
--ross saciuk
Questions Without One Definitive AnswerReview Date: 2005-03-06
The most enlightening thing about poetry, especially Neruda's style of writing poetry, is that it lends itself to much interpretation. Anyone that reads this book will have their own answer and interpretation of what they think Neruda was trying to convey. For example, Neruda has a knack for covering politics. He writes:
"How did the grapes come to know
the cluster's party line?
And do you know which is harder,
to let run to seed or to do the picking?
It is bad to live without a hell:
aren't we able to reconstruct it?
And to position sad Nixon
with his buttocks over the brazier?
Roasting him on low
with North American napalm?" (p.18)
For the most part, the book has a zen-like quality, which suggests a complexity to the poems -- the sense of not-knowing, and moving towards intuitive perceptions, beyond rehearsed patterns of thinking and feeling (viii). In a way, it appears complex, but at the same time liberating. Neruda's poetry is simple in its structure.
Beyond analysis, BOOK OF QUESTIONS is also helpful for anyone trying to refresh their memory to read and write in spanish. The translations are wonderful and practical. I recommend this book as well as other books by Neruda because of this added bonus.
Brief Lines That Create Nostalgia For Pablo NerudaReview Date: 2006-12-07
Intending his reader to be stimulated by his words to create a visual image that is personal, his questions from this volume so aptly titled 'The Book of Questions' open our eyes and our minds to some rapturously beautiful experiences. Examples:
'Why don't inanimate things
do something?
Where did a celestial body
leave something tonight?
Why don't they train helicopters
to suck honey from the sunlight?
Where did the full moon leave
its sack of flour tonight?'
Warmly humorous, touching and eventually elevating, the questions remain on the backs of our eyes awaiting reentry into our brains for relish at needy times. Neruda is a poet for all seasons. Just read this book and discover. Grady Harp, December 06
Questions for the SoulReview Date: 2005-11-07


Great AdventureReview Date: 2006-07-26
UsefulReview Date: 2004-05-05
An exciting, detailed cruising guideReview Date: 2001-11-12
25th anniversary edition is even betterReview Date: 2001-03-12
Wonderful color photos make this a real delightReview Date: 2001-07-21

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what a fun readReview Date: 2008-06-21
There should be a Nobel Prize for musical scholarship!Review Date: 2008-03-02
Ned Sublette explains why in his marvelous book. I find myself pouring over passages, rereading and underlining and making notes to myself in the back. I can't take a lot of this at one time. I'll put the book down to pick it up a week later and end up rereading what I'd already read. The prospect of getting all the way to the end of it fills me with joy and dread at the same time. It's not that it's densely written: on the contrary, it's some of the clearest, easiest to read scholarly writing I've ever run across (and that's a lot, by the way).
The book is not for everyone. You have to like music, for starters. Then, it would be good if you enjoy learning about how musical styles originate, travel, and influence other styles. Cuba has been a true melting pot for many of the world's musical traditions, and most have made their way to this country, through New Orleans, through New York, and by other means, to the point that its influence is discernible in almost every popular American genre today. Sublette has traced these influences in the most careful and understandable way, and the result is enlightenment on every single page.
Now I hear that Sublette has another book out on the musical cultures and history of New Orleans. This is wonderful news even if it means I'll spend the next five years finishing both volumes. Amazon won't let me review a book twice, so I won't be able to comment on the latter parts of Cuba and Its Music here. Maybe I'll be able to mention it when I finally report on The World that Made New Orleans: From Spanish Silver to Congo Square.
Quien sabe, sabeReview Date: 2005-06-12
El UnicoReview Date: 2006-02-28
This is particularly true when it comes to dissecting the story that most conventional Western Hemisphere histories neglect-the profound cultural influence of West Africa. As Sublette notes, "the drum...what an African would call a drum-is conspicuously missing from European music before the sixteenth century." Was it the creolized cultures of the New World that finally gave Europeans license to return to the dance floor after centuries of Church proscription? Sublette presents a convincing case for this, while simultaneously providing an explanation for those among us who are rhythmically challenged...
Readers also benefit from the full spectrum Sublette's perspective--that of a musician who migrates comfortably between the music of the concert hall and the dance hall. "Dancing," he writes, "is an intense listening state. Dancing can be complex and it can be spiritual. African music is almost always music for dancing; and so is Cuban music, which is African music's grown-up child." No armchair scholar talks like that.
Furthermore, his writing is not of that academic ilk that is afraid to offer opinions, or reveal passions. (For starters, he states that he likes Cuban music because he "has good taste.") Nor does he shy away from connecting the dots or hazarding wide-reaching theories. He is the first author I have come across to point out that the geographical origins of the African slaves-those coming to North America from the Senegambia, those to the Caribbean from the coastal areas-largely explains the differences in the musical styles (melismatic vs. polyrhythmic) between these two regions of the Western Hemisphere. Shouldn't this information be part of our cultural literacy?
The subject of this book is huge and Sublette is certainly up to the task. (Did I mention the extensive index?) I have also found, thanks to this text, that I am listening to Cuban musicians (eg. Chano Pozo, Miguelito Valdes, Arsenio Rodriguez) with new ears. That's quite a gift. Chevere que chevere!
Filling a gap that I never knewReview Date: 2007-06-25
Because I admire and particularly enjoy multidisciplinary cultural histories, Sublette's book is a feast. His explorations are ours. You will be fascinated, and you will be delighted. The book is an education. Buy it.

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Truth, first handReview Date: 2002-04-08
As a Cuban born US citizen I applaude this book.
An excellent piece of reportingReview Date: 2008-08-08
The author had to flee Cuba with his family when he was 18, just months after the thake over by dictator-narcissist Castro. In '96 he visists Cuba again briefly and takes with him his camera. This is not a touristic approach to Cuba. This is the personal and nostalgic -not angry- brief comeback of a Cuban exile. And man, does he succeed in making us feel like exiles too!
Themes visited:
-How does Cuba's socialist regime make it to survive so long?
Interviewee. "It's their fault (the Americans') Castro is still here making everyone's life in Cuba hell. Time and time again they've saved Castro. How? By permitting immigration. In 1980 Cuba was ready to explode. What does the US do? They allow a hundred thousand Marielitos to emigrate. I tell you, those people were ready to kill. So Fidel lets them go ... He's a master at duping the Europeans into thinking this a democratic socialist paradise. And he is a master of repression."
-Discrimination?
"Cuban leadreship is almost exclusively white, and out of a hundred generals in the army, ninety are white, while the majority of Cubans are black. The prison population is reported to be overwhelmingly black."
-A sharp question
"I've heard this joke: 'socialism or death: what's the difference' How come I don't see antigovernment graffiti? -Because we have the most sophisticated repression in the world ... the jails are full of people they have caught doing graffiti. We still have plenty, but it gets painted over immediately."
-The US embargo
"A visit to a dollar store makes it clear to everyone that the embargo doesn't prevent Cuba from acquiring whatever American products Cuba wants or needs since they can get them fairly easily through Panama or Mexico."
"The embargo provides Castro with his last excuse why the Cuban economy is in shambles. Also, Fidel functions best when he is attacked. He becomes energized. He needs an enemy, a scapegoat. And the Helms-Burton law is to order ... the way to fight him is to hit him where his system is vulnerable. Flood Cuba with American tourists, American dollars, with ideas and information. The socialist state cannot withstand that ... If something doesn't work for forty years, you try something else."
Out of 200 people he met, only 5 still supported the revolution. And they were professors or people with privileges.
I'd like to find another good book like this, even without pictures, only updated for the 12 years that have elapsed.
The author immigrated to the Northern states and his personal view reflects: he is not so radical as the people in Miami are, he claims. If I had to live in Cuba without freedom I'd even be more "radical" than the Miami exiles. I'm sure he changed his mind a little, after his excursion on the island, because the people there think more like me.
CUBA WOULD ALSO LIKE TO BE ABLE TO GO BACK AND SEE.Review Date: 2001-01-12
I FOUND THIS BOOK VERY EASY TO READ. IT WAS AS IF I WAS READING PART OF MY STORY, MY LIFE. IT ANSWERED MANY QUESTIONS I HAVE HAD. IT ALSO ANSWERED THE WHY OF MANY FEELINGS I HAVE. THE LAST TIME I WAS IN CUBA WAS 1953, MUCH LONGER THAN HIM. I WOULD LOVE TO BE ABLE TO GO BACK AS HE DID. MY HUSBAND AND I WOULD LIKE TO SEE IF THIS YEAR WE CAN GO BACK. WE JUST ARE NOT SURE OF HOW SAFE IT WOULD BE. WE WOULD LIKE TO GO TO SANCTI SPIRITUS, LAS VILLA, VERY FAR FROM HAVANA. I FOUND IT TO BE GREAT READING. IT WAS TOLD IN A VERY CLEAR WAY. IT EXPLAINED MANY THINGS I DID NOT UNDERSTAND. THIS BOOK CAN BE READ BY CUBAN'S AND THOSE WHO ARE NOT CUBAN'S IT IS VERY INTERESTING FOR ALL. ALSO ONE CAN APPRECIATE ALL WE HAVE.
STILL WOULD OF LIKED MORE. I WOULD OF LIKED MORE PICTURES OF THINGS HE WROTE ABOUT. HIS SUMMER HOME, WOULD OF LIKED TO SEE OTHER PICTURES OF THE HOUSE. WOULD OF BEEN GREAT, FOR HIM TO HAVE BEEN ABLE TO MAKE HIS TRIP TO THE OTHER PROVINCES HAS HE HAD WANTED TO DO.
I ALSO WOULD LIKE TO KNOW IF THIS BOOK IS AVAILABLE IN SPANISH.
I WOULD LIKE TO THANK MR. MENDOZA FOR THIS BOOK. WISH HIM THE BEST, WILL BE LOOKING FOR OTHER WORK HE HAS DONE.
Wanting to Go BackReview Date: 2001-01-21
REDISCOVERING LONG LOST MEMORIESReview Date: 2000-06-26
Related Subjects: Jamaica
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I find this to be the most accessible of Neruda's books that I have read, perhaps because its subject was a central part of his life. As explained in the introduction of the book, these poems are autobiographical, and written about his wife, Matilde Urrutia. First published anonymously in 1952, they were released in 1963 under his own name, but only after much thought, because of their "intimate birth".
The translations by Donald D. Walsh are superb. He has captured the fluid rhythm, the emotion, and the fire.
He was fortunate to have had this remarkable relationship, as well as the ability to express his feelings with such uncommon depth, but for those men who lack Neruda's poetic genius, and who would like to melt the heart of the woman they love, this might be the perfect gift to go along with that bunch of flowers.