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Blisters has is specially graphic, and I relate to the way minor injuries were dealt with at home. These poems scream humanity into a Cuban Culture that has been denied the right to vocalize it.
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Any lover of poetry with an accent would not be disappointed with Garabato Poems.
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There are poems of animals, of hawks, of mosquito zappers, and songs of oxtail soup. There is a section on duende -- which may refer to Lorca's mysterious inspirational force, a sort of "trickster who meddles and stirs" up trouble.
These poems are also about exile, of leaving and wanting to get back, of freedom, but without luxury. There are also touching poems of exile from a father no longer here, but who spoke of an "in-between-ness of spirit that occurs in immigrants".
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The author, born in Cuba in 1962, left when he was eight years old. Such is his expertise. I was in Cuba when Fidel Castro took power, and never heard a kind word about the thugs and murderers the Batista regime inflicted upon Cubans in order to maintain their pampered privilege. The book offers no sympathy or understanding of what life was like under Batista; but, it's filled with the so-called horrors of life in Cuba since then.
Granted, there are Russians who genuinely miss the law, order and good government of Joseph Stalin. So, it's hardly surprising there are Cubans who miss the good ol' days of Batista, when it really meant something to have money, power, position and privilege. This book is little more than a pampered pout about the passing of the old regime; anyone who wants to get a feeling about what it is like to live under tyranny needs only read 'One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovitch."
Most patriotic Cubans who have any sense of the history of their people are grateful for the many accomplishments of the Castro regime. Having achieved a great deal, they want to be free to accomplish much more on their own. Their disillusionment with Castro is not that he made life better for 80 percent of the people; it's that he's terrified of giving people the freedom to make life better for themselves.
The Cuban success in the US is remarkable, and shows what free Cubans can accomplish. But, they did not need to condemn 80 percent of their fellows to poverty and misery to succeed. In Cuba, the tyranny of Batista kept most of the population in poverty and terror; now, the tyranny of Castro keeps the majority of the population from soaring to the heights of their own individual success. Batista produced terror, Castro produces mediocrity. Take your pick as to which is worse.
Suarez shows no signs of understanding the difference. That makes this a great book for Gusanos, but useless for anyone interested in modern Cuba or the difference between tyranny and the freedom to be an individual.
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the stars here are not for the quality of this book (which is solid) but the sordid practice of pretending to be a reader when you are either the author or his collaborator.
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