"An unbiased perspective of Cuba?"
Good travel writing must encompass an author's ability to
leave a good deal of his preconceptions and certainties at
home and view everything from a different perspective.
Conversations With Cuba, authored by C. Peter Ripley does
not disappoint the reader in presenting Cuba in an
impartial and unbiased light that for many of us will be
quite a revelation. As the title suggests, the book is based on a chronicle of
conversations the author held with several Cubans during
the course of his six trips to Cuba from 1991 until 2000.
The first trip commences in 1991 and as the author
states "a book about Cuba wasn't part of the plan when I
began scheming to travel to Fidel Castro's embargoed
island."
It was moreover a need to satisfy a romantic curiosity that
had occupied the author's mind since the age of fifteen.
The opportunity presented itself when Ripley convinces a
writer friend to tag along with him when the friend had
been assigned by a magazine to write an article concerning
Castro's emerging tourism trade. From the very onset of his travels in 1991, Ripley is able
to make personal contact with ordinary Cubans who are very
eager to converse and express their feelings and
perceptions.
In fact, as the author states, "whatever the problems,
whatever the politics of this place, no one, no one,
refused to talk with us, about anything. Who is going to
believe that back home."
Subsequent trips to Cuba reveal a kind of roller coaster
ride in the sense that unlike the initial contact with
Cuba, there were periods of extreme anxiety when basic
necessities such as food, fuel and electricity were
rationed. As for consumer goods, they were out of bounds
for the average Cubans, although they were available in
stores where foreigners frequented.
There was also a prohibition imposed on the Cubans from
being permitted to frequent hotels where foreigners
vacationed. This period was followed by a kind of loosening when a
sliver of Capitalism peeks out from the clouds and Castro
permits farmers to sell their produce for dollars in
various markets.
Unfortunately, this does not last too long, and the brakes
are applied, putting an end to the so called "good times." Ripley is very effective in revealing to the reader the
spirit and soul of Cuba.
As he states, "whatever Cuba was or was not, whatever she
might become, she was not an island where a single opinion
prevailed, however much some claim or hope."
This is evidenced in the many towns and villages Ripley
visits and as he asserts, Havana is not Cuba. To understand
Cuba you must travel throughout the country and in
particular to Santiago, the birthplace of the revolution.
It is in all of these towns and hamlets where you will
feel, taste, hear and smell what Cuba is all about and
perhaps where it may be going in the future. Although the book is not meant to be a scholarly text, it
certainly serves as an excellent introduction in
understanding Cuban history prior to and after the
revolution.
"Copyright 2002, Bookideas.com. Orginally published at
Bookideas.com"
Reviewed by Norman Goldman
Courtesy Bookidas
Posted June 28, 2002
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