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Title: Biography of a Runaway Slave by Miguel Barnet, W. Nick Hill, Esteban Montejo ISBN: 1-880684-18-7 Publisher: Curbstone Press Pub. Date: October, 1994 Format: Paperback Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $13.95 |
Average Customer Rating: 4.2 (5 reviews)
Rating: 4
Summary: Interesting read on black Cuban culture
Comment: While there are always the nagging doubts of how much credit rests with the editor and how much with the illiterate man telling the story in these testimonies, this is nonetheless a very interesting account coming from a 105 year old Cuban who had been a slave, fought in the War of Independence (domestically known as the Spanish-American War, once the Americans jumped in at the tail-end) and lived through Castro's revolution. Montejo offers many bizarre tales, of devilish Catholic priests drowning girls in caves, of witches, of the War. Perhaps the most suspect aspect is that of Montejo's life in the forest, isolated from everything for several years, which he details as a very good and happy time for him, which in reality must have been a very difficult and painful experience. The story is very interesting reading, however, that illuminates very well the thoughts of this man and to a lesser extent his culture, which he claims that he disassociated with somewhat. His detail of the relationship between the tribal African religions of Lukumi and Congo and the Catholic Church are indicative of many places where indigenous peoples adopt their conqueror's religion for display but retain their beliefs most passionately- though in Cuba it seems like the Church didn't really make an attempt to convert the common slave to the "true religion." This is also shown in his own personal beliefs in that he incorporates some elements of Catholicism but mainly holds faith in different African religions. The most striking aspect to me was Montejo's discussion of family relations- which is eerily in line with the present-day realities of the black majority (approaching 75% illegitimacy rate) in the US today- in that he describes an essentially matriarchal structure (or lack thereof) in which there is no real nuclear family. Marriage is not a great issue, women take their children in search of a man to live with them, and men are not particularly concerned with families or keeping their women around. This is certainly a very interesting book on the subject of black culture and religion in Cuba, that has managed to retain its identity through 400 years of Spanish colonial rule, 60 years of US puppet dicatorship, and still flourishes today.
Rating: 5
Summary: REVIEW QUOTES
Comment: "...a powerful account of a vanished world...invaluable." --Newsweek
"An extraordinary record of a bygone era...Montejo reveals an appealing personality as he talks of women, religion, and politics. His descriptions of the activities and treatment of slaves on the Spanish plantations before and after abolition are fascinating. A rare record of history as it was lived..." --Library Journal
"Its contribution to our understanding of Cuban history and national temperament is no less than its immense appeal as a human testament...All the fire and dash of the Cuban character, the refusal ever to cringe or to give up, take on flesh and meaning in the reminiscences of this stubborn veteran." --Times Literary Supplement
Rating: 4
Summary: a worthy read, some dull parts
Comment: some of this book was fascinating...to me. i found the old man's recollections of so many aspects of long-past cuba's rural life just gripping, but even moreso, to have it told, more or less, in his words, just added a special dimension that no other type of book could really create. i felt like i was being led on a journey by a character of such realness that no true "biographer" or fiction writer could approximate it.
particularly good parts: his descriptions of the cruelty of cuban slavery, of the cruelty of whites, of his ideas about sex, about certain aspects of the war for independence
now for the bad stuff: some of it, i must admit, just dragged. he was a religious/mystical guy, and all his descriptions of the old religions, though certainly realistic and valid, were just boring to me, and i started skimming. also, in part this book was the recollections of a 105 year old man, and so, while i give such an old man credit for being able to tell a good story (or perhaps the credit is due to the editor), it still reads at point like...an old man's story, and not an old man who has a true gift for story-telling. as for plot, forget it. suspense...think again. drama...no. just the facts, and thank god they're interesting enough on their own.
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Title: I, Rigoberta Menchu: An Indian Woman in Guatemala by Rigoberta Menchu, E. Burgos-Debray, Ann Wright ISBN: 0860917886 Publisher: Verso Books Pub. Date: August, 1987 List Price(USD): $20.00 |
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Title: Problems in Modern Latin American History: A Reader (Latin American Silhouettes) by John Charles Chasteen, Joseph S. Tulchin ISBN: 0842023283 Publisher: Scholarly Resources Pub. Date: August, 1997 List Price(USD): $21.95 |
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Title: Colonial Spanish America: A Documentary History by William B. Taylor, Kenneth Mills ISBN: 0842025731 Publisher: Scholarly Resources Pub. Date: April, 1998 List Price(USD): $22.95 |
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Title: Chronicle of a Death Foretold by Gabriel Garcia Marquez ISBN: 0345310020 Publisher: Ballantine Books Pub. Date: 12 February, 1984 List Price(USD): $6.99 |
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Title: Born in Blood and Fire: A Concise History of Latin America by John Charles Chasteen ISBN: 0393976130 Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company Pub. Date: January, 2001 List Price(USD): $39.05 |
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