Caribbean Books


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Caribbean Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Caribbean
It's About Thyme
Published in Paperback by Word Association (2005-05)
Author: Mary Rocto
List price: $24.85
New price: $24.85
Used price: $102.06

Average review score:

easy and delicious
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-03
this is one of the best cookbooks I own. The seafood section is tops! She has opened my eyes to Jamaican food and I'm planning a trip next year to visit the island. Anyone can cook her food, this gets 5 thumbs up from me.

different
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-14
I love this book because it's very different from any other cookbook I've bought. I have made many recipes and all turned out great! My favorite would be the jerk,festivals,codfish balls and broiled salmon, so far. Oh, made the chocolate cheescake and I have to say, the best ever! One thing author makes a mistake she says to add melted chocolate but no melted chocolate in the ingredients but that' okay, I figured it out myself and when I tasted it I was in heaven..

Delicious!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-02
My fiancé and I love to experiment with new foods, and new tastes. We have so far tried the Oxtail, Coconut Chicken, and the Curry chicken recipes, and all I have to say is... Wow, are these recipes easy to follow, and the wonderful combination of spices are just perfect. If you are looking to make your taste buds dance, this is the perfect cook book to get.





refreshing
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-31
I have to tell you that this cookbook was so refreshing. She gives step by step detail and the fact that she is not a cook is very appealing because it gives me hope that I can make her recipes. I have tried the crab salad in papaya, so easy and really tasty. My daughter made the chocolate cake and she was so happy that it actually came out, she is only 16.

Love the Patties!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-02
Yes Beef Patties is where it's at, and trust me for me to actually make them, and they came out tasting better then the frozen patties, anyone can do it. I love beef patties, and the best thing is these ones are the best patties I've ever eaten... I still can't believe I made them myself. Can't wait to try the rest of the recipes!

Caribbean
Jamaican Cooking: 140 Roadside and Homestyle Recipes
Published in Paperback by MacMillan Publishing Company (1997-06-25)
Author: Lucinda Scala Quinn
List price: $15.00
Used price: $29.95
Collectible price: $64.95

Average review score:

SCRUMPTIOUS!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-10
The Roast Pork recipe in this book is to DIE for!!! I can't wait to try the others!!!

A real Jamaican Knows
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-08
I was born and raised in Jamaica until I was 13 and learned to cook from my mother and grandmother. I gave this book as Christmas presents to a few friends who love my cooking and wanted to know how to make many of my native dishes. I found this book years ago when 1st published. After reading the receipes I knew it was the right one because it sounded much like my mother and grandmother teaching me in the kitchen years ago. I've tested a few of the recipes that I didn't learn and they tasted like I remember eating....LOVE IT, LOVE IT, LOVE IT. A MUST BUY.

All the recipes that I was looking for...
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-12
After renting a house in Montego Bay several years ago and having a Jamaican cook we have tried to find a "True" Jamaican cook book. This is it! From the meat pies that we had downtown to the lobster curry caserole our cook made. This cook book captures the true flavors of Jamaican cooking.....

Delicious!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-08
I haven't tried all of these recipes yet, but so far it's been great. The only downside would be that some of the ingredients are quite unfamiliar to me (chayote, for example), and I have no idea where to get a half gallon of coconut milk around here.

It is worth noting that this book has many nice fish and seafood recipes, not just a bunch of barbecued meats.

Tomorrow, cornmeal porridge for breakfast. Finally I will know what Bob Marley was singing about in No Woman No Cry.

priceless resource book only if........
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-03
i have been fortunate enough to sample lucindas jerk chicken years ago....if she has been true to her formula, then this is a MUST book for anyone with taste buds.......So....this book is absolutely priceless..if lucinda has been generous enough (and honest enough) to give us ALL the right proportions...(i'm sure she has....she's got a reputation to uphold.....!) then you gotta get the book, invite a few friends over, get some red stripe,...and start jerking!!!! bob romano.....

Caribbean
Martin Fierro
Published in Paperback by iUniverse (1999-12)
Author: Jose Hernandez
List price: $13.95
New price: $8.00
Used price: $6.97

Average review score:

I Recommed this Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-23
A great book for those who wants to learn about Argentinian way of life and traditions. If you can read it in Spanish Language you'll apreciate it more. Regards.-

Warning
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-25
I bought this edition of the unforgettable classic by José Hernandez (meaning, the one by iUniverse, ISBN 1-58348-811-1) misled by the review below that recommends it as including both, the Spanish original and the English translation, and as being extensively annotated. That review must refer to a different edition, for this one only includes the Spanish text (both parts, Martín Fierro and La Vuelta de Martín Fierro) and is NOT annotated.

I want to buy this book.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-30
It is a spanish editio

Excellent description of the gaucho's life
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-07
If you want to understand the life-style of the gauchos in Argentina by the begining of the century then this book is for you. Unfortunatly unless you read it in spanish you might lose 80% of it's value, since it is written in the gaucho's jargon.

paperback in print!
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-21
Martin Fierro THE HARDCOVER EDITION IS NOW OUT OF PRINT, GET THE PAPERBACK HERE AT AMAZON; COPY & PASTE THE FOLLOWING ISBN into the SEARCH field -- ISBN-13: 9780791458600.

Caribbean
Pablo Neruda: Absence and Presence
Published in Hardcover by W W Norton & Co Inc (1990-09)
Author: Luis Poirot
List price: $39.95
Used price: $35.00
Collectible price: $150.00

Average review score:

Amazing photographs and investigation
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-02
Luis Poirot is one of my favorites photographers. This book about Pablo Neruda is great, not only for the quality of the beatiful images, but also for the investigation with the people who knew Neruda well.
Absolutamente recomendable!!!!

A book to relish
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-12
I saw it first in my college library, subsequently I bought it. Neruda's zest for life is enviable. The book makes me want to know more and more about him and his writings. It has been a year now, and I go back time to time, to read something or the other from the book, again and again. The photographs of Neruda's homes set the context for the poetry contained side by side. Translation is comforting for me.

I understand very little about literature but poetry is now my one of the serious love interest thanks to his poem titled 'Poetry': "It was the age when it arrived in search of me.......I was there without a face and it touched me".

Bravo! Why ? This is what I found his book, and a new word "wakefulness" :))

" It is very appropriate, at certain times of the day or night, to look deeply into objects at rest: wheels which have traversed vast dusty spaces, bearing great cargoes of vegetables or minerals, sacks from the coal yards, barrels, baskets, the handles and grips of the carpenter tools. They exude the touch of man and the earth as a lesson to the tormented poet. Worn surfaces, the mark hands have left on things, the aura, sometimes tragic and always wistful, of these objects, lend to reality a fascination not to be taken lightly.

The flawed confusion of human beings shows in them, the proliferation, materials used and discarded, the prints of feet and fingers, the permanent mark of humanity on the inside and outside of all objects.

That is the kind of poetry we should be after, poetry worn away as if by acid by the labor of hands, impregnated with sweat and smoke, smelling of lilies and of urine, splashed by the variety of what we do, legally or illegally.

A poetry as impure as old clothes, as a body, with its food stains and its shame; with wrinkles, observations, dreams, wakefulness, prophecies, declarations of love and hate, stupidities, shocks, idylls, political beliefs, negations, doubts affirmations, taxes."

Beautiful, loving, earthy, pictoral poetry
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-26
This collection sets a wonderful selection of Neruda's poetry and anecdotes into a the photographic setting of his life. It is a beautiful book.

deepful
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-11
I love looking at the pictures and reading his poetry. I also love knowing the little tidbits of information. I have been to his three houses in Chile that are pictured in this book. When I look through it I have this rush of emotions and a pleasant rememberance of being there.

Viva Pablo!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-18
Neruda is a poetry god. And interest in the Chilean writer's work is growing again thanks to Il Postino (The Postman), the Oscar-nominated film in which he's a character.

This coffee table compendium presents some of his most exquisite verse coupled with warm, full-page photographs of, among others, his ocean front home, Ilsa Negra, with its nautical knick-knacks. The man's presence pervades the volume and includes personal accounts from those who knew him. Translator Alastair Reid has chosen works that suit the pictures and work well as whole. It's a delightful introduction to one of the centuries greatest wordsmiths.

Caribbean
The Painted Canoe (Anthony C. Winkler Collection)
Published in Paperback by Macmillan Caribbean (2006-07-31)
Author: Anthony C. Winkler
List price: $12.45
New price: $14.77
Used price: $5.00

Average review score:

Delightful with Wonderful Insight into Jamaican Life and Human Nature
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-15
I had the pleasure of meeting Anthony Winkler and his wife at the 2007 Caribbean Literary Festival held in Antigua. The author has a wry humour, a very intriguing outlook and philosphy on life, and an obvious love for his homeland. Winkler has brought these together in a deeply engrossing novel about a poor and defornmed fisherman Zacariah, and his life. The story is moving, humorous, telling as to the vagaries of human nature and insightful about the Jamaican, of an earlier era. I heartily recommend this novel. It's very well done.

Exceptional!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-06
This book is a real gem and deserves a much wider readership. It focuses on a poor, ugly Jamaican fisherman named Zachariah Pelsie who has a jaw disfigured from disease. Zach is an exceptionally proud, stubborn, honorable and determined man. His wife, Carina, is strong, rash, and passionate about her husband. The other major character in the book is Archibald Richardson, a British medical doctor who serves the rural poor. Other notable characters include the pompous parson, the compliant constable, the resentful nurse, the antagonistic Mr. and Mrs. Lewis, and a relentless hammerhead shark. They are all very strong and memorable characters. Lucy P - the painted canoe - could be considered as a major (albeit inanimate) character too.

The Painted Canoe is more serious and not as relentlessly humorous as The Duppy or The Lunatic, also by Winkler, but clearly his best (and first) work. The middle section, when Zach is lost at sea, is a masterpiece of epic drama. I was uncomfortable with the binary opposition between Zach, who loves life, his wife and children, his canoe, and his livelihood, and the cynical, pessimistic white doctor who wants a divorce from his wife, abuses his black girlfriend, and sees no reason for him or anyone else to live.

My edition of the book was published by Macmillan Caribbean. I was surprised by the many misspelled words, and some misused words - "emancipated" rather than "emaciated" body, for example. It needed an editing.

The Painted Canoe is a wonderful introduction to rural Jamaican life. It will be enjoyed by everyone and loved by many.

Jamiaca - Hot, Hot, Hot ....
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-11
The painted canoe is excellent reading with emotionally gripping chapters to hold your interest. The scenario is Jamaica 1970?s and a poor Black fisherman named Zacariah who is deformed UGLY. Poor Zachariah , who?s name means ?God remembers?,ends up lost at sea where we learn many things about him and ourselves. In this book the human spirit is exposed and the traits that define it explored. In addition, we see Jamaica from a poor citizens view and experience exactly what that means. There is a quote by Calvin Coolidge that I thought of after reading this book:
? Press on: nothing in the world can take the place of perseverance. Talent will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful men with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent.? Great book.

Jamaica..Hot, Hot, Hot
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-10
This book is a great read. The Jamaican fisherman, Zachariah, reminds us how an eccentric nature can lead us throught life and how the human spirt will fight to survive. There is more to life than what we can see in front of us because there are times when we must step out on faith alone, as Zachariah did.

A must read for a taste of life in Jamaica.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-14
As a native of Jamaica, living in the USA, this book brought back fond memories of the Island. The main character, a fisherman is typical of the "older' Jamaican native in his beliefs and value system. He exhibits a trait rare in my adopted homeland, but common in Jamaica, where ones personal circumstances are not allowed to dictate your inner personality. A great read for both Jamaicans and non Jamaicans. Also a good intro to the native language and culture.

Caribbean
Paroles et Lumieres-Where Light Speaks: Haiti
Published in Hardcover by Intl Child Care (1999-09-15)
Author: Carl Hiebert
List price: $40.00
New price: $22.00
Used price: $22.00

Average review score:

Great book that helps a good cause...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-20
I love this book because it is so positive and shows the beauty of the people and places of Haiti. The combination of photography and poetry is striking and really draws you in. Every time I open it, it's like being back in Haiti again. Best of all, the proceeds go to International Child Care, a non-profit health development organization that is working to help children and families in Haiti live better lives. What more could you want from a coffee table book?

Breathtaking Photography, Moving Poetic Verse
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-31
I am the adoptive mom of a little Haitian girl. The other night we went to a church to hear a missionary speak about Haiti, and this gorgeous book was on the missionary's display table as a way of showing Americans the beauty of the people in that desperate land. Though we have plenty of photographs ourselves from my husband's trip there in 1997 (to finalize the adoption and bring our daughter home) we were deeply moved by the professional photography in this book. It shows the poverty, yes, but it also shows beauty and community, the natural splendor of the land and the warmth of a people so ravished by the cruelty of their government, but still able to smile. This is a book of hope, and a book of brilliant color, and a book which shows the strength of the Haitian people. Each gorgeous photo has an accompanying poetic verse in Creole and in English. A truly lovely book....

Haiti - an enchanting depiction
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-01
This book provides powerful, beautiful photography, sensitive narrative, and original poetry. It respects the country, its culture and its language. It has a depth not expected in "table top" books. It is the number one book on my gift list this year! (not found in most book stores). Wonderful -

Beautiful book
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-21
I lived in Haiti for 18 years and I must say that this book does a wonderful job of portraying Haiti. If you've ever traveled to Haiti or lived there, this book will bring back fond memories. If you've never been to Haiti, you might find yourself longing to visit. This book will help you see why so many people who visit Haiti end up falling in love with it despite the fact that it's one of the poorest, most destitute countries in the world.

It took me back to a place I love
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-04
The photos and text of this book are truly amazing. As soon as I opened the book, it was as if I were back in Haiti once again. Smelling the smells, hearing the sounds, seeing the sights.

A wonderful gift for someone who has been to Haiti and was touched by the beauty and simplicity of a country so close to the U.S. in proximity and so far away in reality.

Caribbean
The Puerto Ricans: A Documentary History
Published in Hardcover by Markus Wiener Publishers (2008-01)
Author:
List price:

Average review score:

MY FAVORITE BOOK ON PR HISTORY
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-05
I've collected many books on PR history over the years in both English and Spanish. This is by far my favorite. A must to have for any Puerto Rican looking for a good start to learn about his/her history, but not just for amateurs or beginners.

Fantastic Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-27
The authors do a wonderful job of describing the history of Puerto Ricans on the island from the time before Columbus to the 1970's. They do a unique job of pulling from official transcripts which paint a very accurate picture of various subjects from the life of a "Xibar/Jibaro" to the arguement in cogress on whether to include Puerto Ricans in the military draft of the 1960's. I highly recommend this book for anyone who wants to know about the history of the island and it's people.

A complete documentaty textbook on Puerto Rican history
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-21
It is a very well documented book, and provides proof or evidence of each historic event. It is objective and is not biased toward any political view. The best thing of the book is that it fills those empty spaces I had from my years studying PR history. With this book, I was able to see the "whole picture" or in other words "tie those loose ends".

A real gem, in my opinion. I still refer to it a lot. When my kids have questions about Puerto Rico, I read passages from the book to them. I absolutely recommend it.

There is one recommendation I would like to give to the editors. Given the number of significant historic events about the Puerto Ricans that have happened since the book was last published in 1994, I recommend the editors to revise this wonderful documentary to bring it up-to-date.

Review from International Migration review
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-02
"A pleasure to read. . . . Each page provides a fresh glimpse into the unfolding story of a people. The book captures the human and personal component of . . . sweeping historical changes." -International Migration

An eye opener
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-07
This book was amazing. I love the format the author used. Unlike other history books the author uses actual documents from Puerto Rico's history to tell her story. After reading this book, I now have an understanding of where my family came from, and more pride in us. Thank you Kal!

Caribbean
Selected Writings (Penguin Classics)
Published in Paperback by Penguin Classics (2002-04-30)
Author: Jose Marti
List price: $16.00
New price: $9.31
Used price: $6.88

Average review score:

A Complete Work!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-10
This collection of Marti's essays and letters are excellent reading for Marti scholars and beginners alike. The works are in chronological order and cover the most pivotal periods of Marti's life. Both of Marti's strongest qualities, the poet and the freedom fighter, are represented with conviction. This book is a definite must read for anyone looking to explore the mind one of the greatest literary figures of all time.

A must for students of American history
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-17
Marti was a prodigy, a genius, yet he is little known in the U.S. either for his prose or poetry. Those who have heard of him may associate him with Radio Marti or know him as a Cuban revolutionary.

While this beautifully rendered translation includes a broad spectrum of Marti's works, some not previously translated, his descriptions of America in the latter half ot the nineteenth century are by themselves sufficient reason to buy this book.

Marti, coming from a different culture, sees things about America that we do not, and he describes them with a passion lacking in the reportage of his North American contemporaries.

A classic! The best anthology of Martí in English
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-26
Here at last--in English--is a comprehensive selection of Martí's writing, translated by a masterful hand. It leaves all other attempts at this task far behind. Esther Allen meets the challenges of Martí's exuberant and complex style with extraordinary success. This book will be a landmark text for college courses on Martí as a Latin American and Latino writer, and is an excellent introduction for the general public. Bravo to all involved in this effort to bring Martí to American readers!

Marti a Manifesto for Today
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-10
Jos Julian Mart y Prez was born in Havana, Cuba on January 28, 1853. He is one of the most renowned writers in the history of Cuba and Latin America. In 1874 Mart earned a Law degree from the University of Zaragoza in Spain. He essentially devoted his life to the cause of independence and to the foundation of a new Cuban nation. As we perceive in the Montecristi Manifesto, Mart was a talented humanist, born out of time; an idealist and martyr that left a legacy on Cuban affairs.

As a philosopher, he attempted to navigate through the intricate mountings of thoughts. "Mart embarked early in life on a mission of political struggle and literary achievement. At fifteen, he wrote an epic poem in praise of Cuba's war of independence against Spain. At seventeen he was imprisoned and sentenced to hard labor for his political activities. For the rest of his life he wrote about and worked unstoppably for the freedom of Cuba. He founded the Cuban Revolutionary Party. His political involvement was accompanied and complemented by a constant and relentless outpouring of poetry, literary prose, journalism and political writing. In 1895 he returned to Cuba with a military force to embark upon another revolution and soon thereafter encountered a suicidal heroic death in battle."

The final battle of his life came in 1895 on Cuban soil, in a place called Dos Rios, after going to the enemy front lines, fighting against the Spanish domination in his beloved land. The expedition that brought the continuation of the war of independence into Cuba commenced in and departed from Florida and passed through the Dominican Republic, on its way to Cuba. Before departing to the east of Cuba, Jos Mart and the General Mximo Gmez, Commander in Chief of the Liberating Army, made public a document in the town of Montecristi, a manifesto exposing the goals of a revolutionary war about to begin. This was an important document that provided the guiding principles for a new Nation or a Republic, as Mart had dreamed.

The Montecristi Manifesto, as it is known in Cuban history, declared the revolution began not in 1895, but 1868, when the Grito de Yara was proclaimed by Carlos Manuel de Cspedes and the Ten Years War (1868-78) against Spanish domination took place. In this manuscript Mart pointed out interesting principles related to Cuba and Latin America, and even of a global undertone. It says: "The war of independence in Cuba...is a far-reaching human event and a timely service that the judicious heroism of the Antilles lends to the stability and just interaction of the American nations and to the still unsteady equilibrium of the world."

The humanistic undertaking of the Manifesto is rooted on the idea of a fully and stable constituted republic with freedom of thought. That republic was to be, not the triumph of one Cuban party over another, but the victory of all elements of the society. Here he establishes the significance of necessary sacrifice for a sublime purpose as the transformation of the old colonial system, a call for harmony and wisdom, and the mandatory establishment of human rights. It denounced the corruption of the metropolis: "The revolution makes use of this language without fear because the mandate to emancipate Cuba once and for all from the irremediable ineptitude and corruption of the Spanish government." Spain was not the only preoccupation on Marti's thoughts; the forces pointing to an annexation of Cuba to the United States were rampant and seemingly viable.

Marti saw in the liberation of Cuba the angular stone to stop the expansion of the North American imperialism. In his last and unfinished written letter to his longtime friend Manuel Mercado, then the Mexican undersecretary of the Interior, he pointed: "Every day now I am in danger of giving my life for my country and my duty-since I understand it and have the spirit to carry it out-in order to prevent, by the timely independence of Cuba, the United States from extending its hold across the Antilles and falling with all the greater force on the Lands of our America. All I have done up to now and all I will do is for that."

The United States was expanding his dominion and influence around its neighbors. The Monroe Doctrine declared by the U.S. President James Monroe in the seventh annual address to Congress, on December 2, 1823, became the United States' policy regarding Latin America, limiting the rights and activities of the European powers in the western hemisphere. In the beginning, it was merely a declaration of policy, but within years, the idea of annexation of the so called backyard (including the Antilles) was supported by Cubans inside and outside the island, thinking that the annexation of Cuba to the Union would be a benefit; even today, such a concept is not a dead thought for many.

Mart, a secular visionary, had the ability to see beyond the horizon in the entrails of the North American monster. In the same letter to Mercado he wrote: "The nations such as your own and mine, which have the most vital interest in keeping Cuba from becoming, through an annexation accomplished by those imperialists and the Spaniards, the doorway-which must be blocked and which, with our blood, we are blocking-to the annexation of the people of our America by the turbulent and brutal North that holds them in contempt." This so called monster, the United States, had seen in its Latin-American backyard a fertile campground to extract raw materials, dreaming one day, maybe, to be able to add more stars to the American flag.

This monster has not changed too much since then. Its Transnationals, under the concept of democracy and prosperity, can annexate the innocent intentions of a nation. Today, Mart's concerns are incredibly up to date. Is that monster ready to conquer the Latin American lands? As it refers to a military occupation, that is perhaps and most certain a utopia. But things actually have not changed. The United States of America exhibits the same power thirst for money, wherever the possibility arrives. Within the Cuban exiled population, new modern oligarchs see the opportunity of enrichment, possibly after an overturn of the actual political system in the island. Cubans from both outside and inside the island must take Marti's flag again and fight with dignity for a better Cuba, for the principles of justice, and not a mere copy of the savage capitalism that monopolizes even your will, and all that money can buy.

After the 1959 revolution, a new revolution is obligatory. That revolution brought a real independence to the island, but soon the egoist and dictatorial way of the government chose to incline the heart of the country to the red European bear. The Soviet Union made of Cuba a mere atheist puppet, a satellite of the communist interests in the world, an idle society, permanently dependant and attached to its belly button, through an umbilical square line of thought imposed on every Cuban. The Cuban Nation needs no more umbilical lines or written schemes of imported societies from the north, east, west, or south political science books. Our Judeo-Christian values had nothing to do with the reign of the dollar, the euro, or the peso. A mature society based on freedom and equality, justice for all, and dignity that embrace a brilliant future must to be built in godly honesty, sincerity and temperance.

The times of Cuban legends must be buried in the deep sea that surrounds the archipelago. Martyrs, heroes, caudillos, and good-looking stars are enjoyable in the history books; hence, the history of the island should be written in present time. Cuba has no need for last names or bank account numbers to be counted as the many stars in its national blue sky. It is necessary to proceed in a peaceful but profound continuance of the transforming revolutionary process that began in 1868; Cuba has enough heads and hearts to build a society as the Montecristi Manifesto proclaimed: "A country must find a manner of government that can satisfy both the mature and cautious intelligence of its literate sons and the necessary conditions for the assistance and respect of its other people...From its origin, the patria must be constituted in viable forms, forms born of itself."


Nac en un Archipilago
rodeado de azules mares
donde el disentir
se silencia con deshonra

All me impusieron al abuelo Lnin:
destructor,
apstata cegado
y mediocre constructor de un porvenir atascado

Ahora vivo en Troya
y conozco al Caballo desenfrenado.
Se afana mirando al tablero
donde las carreras se apstan
y el dollar se amontona
para agasajar al incrdulo

Hacia dnde vas
Caimn que te escapas?
Quin te lleva, florido ensoador?
Has dejado de contar tus palmas reales;
desmantela el oro,
ese que te pertenece,
no el que en el Atlntico profundo
tus colonizadores sepultaron.

Alejandro Roque.

Canonical
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-03
One of the most amazing writers, and a wonderful small volume, showing the diversity of his talents through many years in a great translation (the poems include the Spanish and English texts). "Our America" is an essay on the cosmopolis that is Latin America, and essays on Emerson and Whitman are among the best that exist. Furthermore, one can forget that Marti spent perhaps more time in New York than anywhere else in his life, and his writings on some of the everyday things there, particularly "A Chinese Funeral," my favorite piece in the book, give one a great sense of the city from a unique and often unrepresented perspective. There is no American literature without Jose Marti.

Caribbean
Unvanquished: Cuba's Resistance to Fidel Castro
Published in Hardcover by Pureplay Press (2004-06-01)
Author: Enrique Encinosa
List price: $26.00
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Everything You Never Knew About Castro's Cuba
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-25
Revolutions are not always the noble struggles that many idealistic people embellish them as. They are often sordid, bloody affairs in which one tyrant is replace by an even worse tyrant. The demagogues and megalomaniacs who lead such revolutions always claim to be acting on behalf of the poor, the working class, and the common people. It's these very same people who wind up victimized by the revolution that was supposed to liberate them.

Enrique Encinosa shows us how Castro's Cuba was such a revolution by presenting us with first hand accounts of the people who suffered from it. Many of these people were tough, independent rural campesinos who had their farms taken by Castro and were forced to work as laborers on collective farms. They defied Castro and felt the awful wrath of his brutality.

Encinosa turns alot of left-wing myths about Castro's glorious revolution on their head. In the beginning, the Cuban Revolution had little to do with socialism or communism. The different factions looked to Castro as their leader, which turned out to be a huge mistake. Castro sold out to the Soviets and betrayed many of his fellow revolutionaries who wanted a democratic revolution. Castro admitted that he lied to the people but that it was "for their own good".

The CIA did not initiate the resistance against Castro. It was started by the very same people who helped Castro overthrow Batista who felt they had been betrayed by Castro. Many of these people turned to the U.S. for help because Castro was already receiving Soviet and East bloc military support to secure his power.

Castro controlled the Cuban media and duped the world into believing he was a "David" who was taking on Goliath (the U.S.). The truth is, Castro was a puppet of the Soviet empire which enabled him to be Cuba's dictator.
This was never a peoples' revolution.

Another myth is Cuba's economic crisis being caused by the U.S. embargo which Castro used as an excuse for his own economic failures. Encinosa claims the embargo was more symbolic than real. The best human resources in Cuba were drained by fear and repression which gave Cubans little incentive to work. In addition, the government had to intervene in all labor disputes. Workers were not allowed to dispute with management or organize unions on their own behalf. Pretty convenient considering that the government owns the factories!

The top people in the government became the new aristocracy in Cuba. The Marxist aristocrats were more oppressive and decadent than the rulers they had replaced. An exiled general in Castro's Cuban air force described how Castro and high ranking communist party members lived like kings while the Cuban people lived in misery.

The lesson to be learned here (my own thoughts,not the author's) is that if you ever hear a demagogue spout off about how he's going to "liberate" you, grab your guns and head for the hlls. That's the guy you're going to need to be liberated from.

A Much Needed Study
Helpful Votes: 25 out of 26 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-17
A concise, but comprehensive look at anti-Castro resistance by Cubans inside and outside the island from 1959 to the present. Encinosa tells an important story that is rarely known outside of the Cuban exile community, as such it is an invaluable study for serious Cuba watchers.

Of special interest, from a military history perspective, was the chapter on the mid-60's anti-Castro guerilla campaign centered in the Escambray mountains of central Cuba. This story is virtually unknown to the outside world, yet captures the courage and defiance to Communist rule, while detailing the uncompromising and brutal tactics Castro used in putting it down. I only wish that a more detailed examination of the Escambray campaign could someday be published. The book flows easily through the various decades, using numerous first-hand accounts of the bravery of those who resisted and the savagery of those who repressed them. Readers will also realize that many of those who took up arms against Castro, had previously supported him. Encinosa also details little known facts about Cuban domestic opposition to their overseas wars. Lastly, a discussion on resistance in the last decade brings to light the viciousness of the Castro regime, best captured in the comments of an individual who tried to set up an 'independent library'.

This book is a great eye-opener that reveals the regime for what it is - repressive and unpopular. Very necessary in light of the constant, and effective propaganda that comes from the island as it tries to influence the more gullible and economic minded sectors of the US. A relevant read given today's developing events.

A powerful testament
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-06
An extremely well researched book that leaves no doubt in the mind of this reader that despite almost fifty years of totalitarian rule the dissident voices calling for freedom and justice in Cuba will never be silenced.

Cuban Martyrs
Helpful Votes: 30 out of 32 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-24
This book will likely be dismissed by the Castrophiles on the academic left who paint the Cuban exile community as a collection of ignorant fascists. Those who approach the text with moral sobriety and decency, however, will be moved by Mr. Encinosa's tribute to the Cuban martyrs who were either murdered, or suffered in Castro's gulags, while having been ignored by the world press. The romantic delusion that Cuba represents a good faith attempt to create a socialist society while defending itself against evil capitalists has been refuted over and over again by the brutality and mendacity of the system. Like Che Guevara's false archetype of the saintly revolutionary, the revolution itself was a pathetic lie and Cuba eventually became the playground for Castro's egocentric fantasies. I should know. During the revolution my father fought against Batista in the Escambray front and my maternal grandparents ran one of the largest safe houses on the island, which offered refuge to many who later became ranking members of the regime. Fortunately, my family recognized the nature of the beast early on and we fled paradise in 1965.

Among the many stories that Mr. Encinosa recounts, one that Americans should become familiar with is the imprisonment of Dr. Oscar Elias Biscet, an Afro-Cuban physician who is currently wasting away in a Cuban prison. While the left is busy denouncing the detention of Islamic radicals at Guantanamo, Dr. Biscet, a Christian pro-life activist and advocate of Dr. Martin Luther King's teachings of nonviolent resistence, is serving a 25 year sentence. He previously served a three year prison sentence for holding a Cuban flag upside down during a press conference. After his conviction on April 7, 2003, Dr. Biscet was placed in solitary confinement in a tiny cell where he was denied sunlight for the first year of his imprisonment. He has been forced to live on handouts from other prisoners because the authorities refused to feed him, he lost several teeth and exists on the verge of starvation. Dr. Biscet's plight is a living synopsis of Castro's experiment in Carribean Stalinism and the motivation for the resistance movements described in the book.

Every college student in America should read this book...
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-09
Academia claims that the basis for intellectual advancement is the un-biased pursuit of the truth. However, when it comes to events that challenge leftist and liberal views, there is a vacum of "openess and understanding" to opposing realities. This is the case with the study of Cuban socialism and the Cuban exiled community which opposes it. Academias' cover up and blatant manipulation of the exile point of view is a classic example of brainwashing in a massive scale.

Anyone wishing to break away from Academia's stranglehold on the minds of the young, should read this book. You will begin to see the truth about what has happened in Cuba, and how it has been covered up in the US by the liberals and the left.

Caribbean
Viente Poemas De Amor Y Una Cancion Desesperada Cien Sonetos De Amor (Ave Fenix)
Published in Paperback by Plaza & Janes Editores, S.A. (1994-01-01)
Author: Pablo Neruda
List price: $9.95
New price: $2.89
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Average review score:

GREAT!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-09
That's only what I may say

Para todos los gentes que son humanos!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1997-04-27
Poeta mas famoso en el mundo nos trajo una obra fantastica, cuando leia, me siento el amor perdido a el. Una obra de Pablo increible, y si no te gusta este, no sabes de poecia! Las poemas te dares un conocimiento que tu no olividaras, y lo regresara lo unico a tu vida

la palabra de amor
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-07
Con versos fáciles de recordar, Neruda escribe en su juventud, este fundamental libro de poesía que cambiaría los ritmos y la forma de enamorar a generaciones de jóvenes, que aún copian sus versos para expresar sus sentimientos. Es una lectura indispensable que recomiendo a los que deseen acercarse a la mejor poesía de amor en español.

magnifico
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-16
magnifica poesia romantica llevada a los limites sin parecer melosa ni trilada. neruda le da una nueva cara al romanticismo, al amor, a los deseos, sus poemas son breves y concisos, libres del influjo de largos y reconditos poemas casi inentedibles escritos por algunos poetas y que estan escritos para analisis eruditos. estos en cambio estan en lenguaje llano y conciso y logran sacarle a este el maximo. me encantaron todos sus poemas.... LUIS MENDEZ

the very best PABLO NERUDA has to offer...
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-02-04
PABLO NERUDA POEM IS A MASTERPIECE, THIS POEM SPEAKS OUT THE FEELINGS THAT YOUNG OR OLD LOVERS WISH THEY COULD SAY. THE POEM IS A WORK OF ART BY THE WAY MR. NERUDA DEALS WITH THE LOSS OF SOMEONE SPECIAL.MY FAVORITE LINE IS "ES TAN CORTO EL AMOR,Y ES TAN LARGO EL OLVIDO." WOW! THAT SAYS IT ALL FOR ME. IT IS VERY EASY TO FEEL THE PASSION OF HIS WRITING STYLE. I AM A COLLEGE STUDENT AT Tarleton State UNIVERSITY AND I AM GOING TO READ THIS POEM TO MY UPPER LEVEL SPANISH CLASS THURSDAY FEB.5,1998 THANK YOU.


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