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The Bay of Pigs Revisited
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16517 |
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BOOK WORLD
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11 / 1989 |
2,778 Words |
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Jose M. Hernandez Jose M. Hernandez is associate dean of the School of Languages
and Linguistics and adjunct professor of history at Georgetown
University. He is the author of ACU: Ios primeros cincuento
anos (Georgetown University Press, 1981). |
AND THE RUSSIANS STAYED
The Sovietization of Cuba
Nestor Carbonell
William Morrow and Co., Inc.
384 pp., $22.50
And the Russians Stayed is not a book about the Bay of Pigs, the ill-fated attempt to overthrow the Castro regime that took place on April 17, 1961. It is rather a book of personal reminiscences that its Cuban-American author, Nestor Carbonell, has cleverly interwoven with events of Cuban history from the last thirty years, roughly the period that Castro has been in power. Once one is done with the last chapter, however, it is difficult to avoid the impression that there is one climatic moment in the narrative--the section devoted to the tragic landing--and that everything following is but aftermath.
Despite the ample historical ground the book covers, it is hard not to identify the central story, the recurring, unifying theme that sets the mood and feeds the passion underlying the writing. Almost immediately after he set his foot on U.S. soil as an exile, Carbonell became active in the Democratic Revolutionary Front, the Cuban organization that sponsored the operation. It should surprise no one, then, that his scars are still visible.
Nowadays Carbonell is business executive for Pepsi-Cola, and he has never claimed to be a historian. He himself warns the reader in his opening remarks that his "memoir does not purport to have the detachment and intellectual rigor of academia." Yet even the most strict and demanding researcher would have to
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