| The Cuban Revolution: Origins, Course, and Legacy |  | Author: Marifeli Pérez-Stable Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
List Price: $37.95 Buy Used: $5.45 as of 9/7/2010 20:32 CDT details You Save: $32.50 (86%)
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Rating: 7 reviews
Media: Paperback Edition: 2 Pages: 288 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 0.8
ISBN: 0195127498 Dewey Decimal Number: 972.91064 EAN: 9780195127492
Publication Date: December 3, 1998
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 7
The best single volume account May 4, 2010 Jorge Mañach (Ann Arbor, MI) Pérez Stable has done a masterful job. My students like the book for its fairness and balance.Her historical chapters present a more nunaced view of prerevolutionary Cuba than is usually the case. I recommend it for class adoption.
Another Brainwashed "Intellectual" August 28, 2009 Andrew J. Rodriguez (Golden, Colorado) 1 out of 7 found this review helpful
Perez-Stable is biased in blaming only the United States and the Cuban-American community for supporting the embargo. Nothing could be farther from the truth.
The main reason the embargo continues is not because of US unreasonable demands toward Cuba, or the failure of American presidents to understand the issues at hand. It persists because the last thing the Castro brothers want is to open the eyes of an enslaved people to the outside world, especially to the fruits of capitalism and the American free enterprise system.
In addition, it is very convenient for tyrants to blame a common enemy for their nation's miseries while they continue to pilfer it, and the United States is the perfect escape-goat.
Ask yourself this question: Why is the lifting of the US embargo so vital to Cuba's communist interests when they can do business with the rest of the planet, more so when distance is unimportant and our world is getting smaller?
I suggest the author reads a 2007 Forbes Magazine article in which old Fidel comes out as one of the wealthiest heads of state second to Queen Elizabeth II with a billion dollars in foreign investments.
To the common sense reader who doesn't believe in the infalible wisdom of intellectuals: The Cuba of the last fifty years is nothing but an alligator-shaped island/farm owned and managed by the Castro brothers for their own enrichment. Communism--already an accepted failure--is just their excuse to continue ripping the country off.
Open your eyes, for heaven's sake, and stop calling Castro's unscrupulous betrayal, a revolution.
Andrew J. Rodriguez
Award winning author: "Adios, Havana," a Memoir.
Grossly inaccurate September 6, 2006 Jose Marti (Miami, FL) 1 out of 13 found this review helpful
Although the book does contain truthful and revelant empirical raw data, the author severely slants the truth (and even sometimes makes half-truths to the point of incorrectly naming Presidents) to the point of satisfying her own argument. Although Castro may very much enjoy her deptiction of the sustained need for socialism, my exiled family as well as my Cuban colleagues find the book disheartening as it weaves a fairytale for Castro as the glorious Savior of the Republic. The fact is that although the Republic did need change, it needed sustained political evolution, not revoltuion as found in the Castro regime. As my family is and comes from a family of Cuban politicians trying to advocate such change, her book is a tragic misinterpretation of those great ideals the infant Republic was trying to accomplish. If you are interested in knowing more about what actually occurred, not some socialist propaganda, watch Andy Garcia's movie The Lost City.
Falls a bit short. June 4, 2004 Chris Caraballo (Gainesville, FL USA) 6 out of 18 found this review helpful
Rarely does one find a book concerning the Cuban Revolution in which the author at least makes an effort to keep there political views out of the analysis. Marifeli Perez-Stable is no exception, as her book will either be praised by the left, or critizied by the right. In writing such a biased account her credibility is jepordized; not only because anyone with half a brain will realize this, but anyone with limited study in regards to the revolution see's many flaws. Amongst the most prevelant is the complete neglect of Cuba's "Counterculture" and the booming tobacco industry in Cuba throughout the 50's (she harbors on sugar as if every Cuban was either a plantation owner or slave). Hopefully Cuban books in the future will steer clear of political biases and present the facts, and only the facts.
A Good Book for anyone trying to understand the Revolution May 9, 2000 19 out of 22 found this review helpful
This book provides an excellent background to social dynamics in Cuba before, during and after the Cuban Revolution, and does a good job analyzing its causes and consequences. It is indeed a must for anyone trying to understand the Revolution. The right wing exile community in Florida will not like this book because it is one of the few that consciously tries to be objective, but that should not dissuade other readers from purchasing this book. It is a bit too crammed with charts and statistics in places, which makes it cumbersome, but those sections are skimmable. I will certainly use it in my undergraduate classes.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 7
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