This is a popular social history of Havana from its founding in 1519 to the present. The authors explain what it has been like to live in Havana physically, socially, culturally, emotionally, and economically. Crafting a narrative of the city’s history fro individual characters, literature, popular culture, and recurring landmarks and neighborhoods, the authors draw on scholarship from both sides of the Florida Straits. Particular attention is paid to the love-hate relationship between the Cuban capital and the United States. This vision of Havana’s life story brings alive the dramatic breaks in the city’s history, alongside all the aspects of its personality that have remained the same. —from the front flap of the dust jacket
This is the first comprehensive history of the culturally diverse city, and the first to be co-authored by a Cuban and an American. Beginning with the founding of Havana in 1519, Cluster and Hernández explore the making of the city and its people through revolutions, art, economic development and the interplay of diverse societies. The authors bring together conflicting images of a city that melds cultures and influences to create an identity that is distinctly Cuban.
What seems like mystery, says a reggae lyric by Jimmy Cliff, is only untold history. I've written both crime novels and history books, as well popular economics (another mystery, for sure). Some of these have been translated into Japanese, Danish, Hungarian, Spanish, Vietnamese, and Bulgarian.
Most recently, a few years living in Cuba led me to do translation myself, from Spanish to English, and to co-author a social history of Havana with a Cuban colleague. We tell what it's been like for people living in the Cuban capital over the past five centuries, and something about why.
You can find some of my translations linked via this author page; others won't show up here, because the industry is still ambivalent about translators, but if you search by my name you'll find them.
I'll give this 3.5 stars -- it works best in its early chapters, presenting the lesser-known colonial origins of a city, which is a story drowned out by the later chapters of gangsters and Castro...and frankly, I find this earlier history much more fascinating. So do the authors, apparently, as they seem more interested and invested in the story of Havana before the explosion on the Maine.
Fairly decent historical account of Havana, but at points laden with unnecessary detail. I don't care to know how much a loaf of bread cost in Havana in the 18th century. I did particularly enjoy the primary accounts of American soldiers in Havana.
This book took me such a long time to read. It was informative yet boring. After a few pages of reading it would just put me to sleep. Not what I intended but happened nonetheless. It was a struggle & I kept thinking it would get better but it didn't. There was a few things to learn which was good & also surprising. If you're a history buff this might be up your alley. There were so many things wrong that happened w/ Cuba but not all of it was their doing. The difficulties of being s small country.
This was a very compressive look at Havana and Cuba from the standpoint of day to day life through various periods. The book does a good job in painting pictures of how life was. The first half of the book is a bit slow and dry, but the second half held my attention much more.
This book is great in learning the origins of Cuba. However, I wish there was a bit more detail when it came to modern day Cuba specifically in the years of Bastiata - Raul.
Very readable - takes you from the Spanish conquest to the present. All the missteps made by the US are documented. Helpful in understanding how we got to where we are today.