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The Initials of the Earth (Latin America in Translation)
 
 
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The Initials of the Earth (Latin America in Translation) [Paperback]

Jesus Diaz (Author), Kathleen Ross (Translator), Ambrosio Fornet (Afterword), Fredric Jameson (Foreword)

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Book Description

0822338440 978-0822338444 October 10, 2006
Many critics consider The Initials of the Earth to be the quintessential novel of the Cuban Revolution and the finest work by the Cuban writer and filmmaker Jesús Díaz. Born in Havana in 1941, Díaz was a witness to the Revolution and ardent supporter of it until the last decade of his life. In 1992 he took up residence as an exile in Berlin and later in Madrid, where he died in 2002. This is the first of his books to be translated into English.

Originally written in the 1970s, then rewritten and published simultaneously in Havana and Madrid in 1987, The Initials of the Earth spans the tumultuous years from the 1950s until the 1970s, encompassing the Revolution and its immediate aftermath. The novel opens as the protagonist, Carlos Pérez Cifredo, sits down to fill out a questionnaire for readmission to the Cuban Communist Party. It closes with Carlos standing before a panel of Party members charged with assessing his merit as an “exemplary worker.” The chapters between relate Carlos’s experiences of the pre- and postrevolutionary era. His family is torn apart as some members reject the Revolution and flee the country while others, including Carlos, choose to stay. He witnesses key events including the Bay of Pigs invasion, the Cuban missile crisis, and the economically disastrous sugar harvest of 1970. Throughout the novel, Díaz vividly renders Cuban culture through humor, slogans, and slang; Afro-Cuban religion; and references to popular music, movies, and comics.

This edition of The Initials of the Earth includes a bibliography and filmography of Diaz’s works and a timeline of the major events of the Cuban revolutionary period. In his epilogue, the Cuban writer Ambrosio Fornet reflects on Díaz’s surprising 1992 renunciation of the Revolution, their decades-long friendship, and the novel’s reception, structure, and place within Cuban literary history.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Cuban writer and filmmaker Diaz (1941–2002) originally published this novel of the revolution in Havana and Madrid in 1987, a few years before his self-imposed exile to Europe in 1991. It traces the life of Carlos Pérez Cifredo, the bourgeois child of a smalltime moneylender, as he grows up into the revolution and its aftermath. The young Carlos harbors a childish adoration-cum-contempt for a poor illiterate girl, a wariness of the black boys from the nearby slum and a real love for John Wayne. As a young man, he struggles to reconcile a visceral resistance to communism with bourgeois guilt and with social idealism. Over the course of the revolution, Carlos becomes a doctrinaire leader of the student movement, an eager would-be fighter, a lousy soldier, a sexual experimenter, a denier of communism and a pariah. Diaz supported the revolution when Castro took power, but the seeds of his later ambivalence toward the regime can be found here, along with an almost impossibly complex and intimate rendering of the revolution, for which a helpful chronology is included. (Oct.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

The Initials of the Earth is an emblematic novel of the Cuban Revolution, and the most significant of those set in the Cuba of the 1960s. . . . [It] is the novel that gives voice to the ways in which Cubans—and particularly young revolutionaries—experienced [those] years of epic change and crisis.”—Ambrosio Fornet, from the epilogue


“This translation of Las Iniciales de la tierra is an exceptional event, and a rare chance to experience Cuban revolutionary literature first-hand.”—Fredric Jameson, from the foreword

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
From the snows of Kilimanjaro, Carlos looked into the jungle and yelled "Tarmangani!" three times, but neither Tantor the elephant nor Cheeta the chimpanzee nor the damned pigmies answered his call. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
bagasse house, astral mother, años duros, underground post, exemplary worker, hoot camp
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
América Latina, Aquiles Rondón, Mister Montalvo Montaner, Nelson Cano, Aquiles Rondbn, José María, José Maria, Initials of the Earth, José Antonio, Roal Amundsen, Roberto Menchaca, Cuban Revolution, North American, Rubén Permuy, Core Committee, Pérez Peña, Tiembla Tierra, Carlos Pérez Cifredo, Fermin Préndez, Johnny Crime, October Crisis, Remberto Davis, Saquiri the Malay, New York, Perfidious Albion
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