From Booklist
Trading her car and house for a folding bike and a series of rented rooms and campsites, Australian suburbanite Chiang embarked on a three-month solo trip across Cuba, from December 1999 to March 2000 (her memoir was published in Australia and New Zealand in 2003). She roamed without a master plan, bunking with Cuban families, spending time in the places where ordinary people lived, making friends, and seeing what life off the beaten tourist paths is like. While the book suffers from a certain repetitiveness--Chiang moves from one dirt-poor community to another, dossing down with one charming family after another--it offers us a revealing look at a Cuba we rarely see, a country whose citizens are still crippled by the government's anti-American political stance, living in poverty, finding small joys in the kind of life most of us can't even begin to imagine. And while Chiang's tone is generally light and breezy, it's the serious messages about politics and poverty behind the entertaining characters and comic misadventures that give the book its staying power.
David PittCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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Review
In the glut of Cuba travel books, this one really stands out. --
Caroline Baum, Good Reading Magazine, July 14, 2003One of the best 'on-the-road' travel books of this generation.... you can feel the wind in your face. --
Martin Stevenson, Launceston Examiner, June 28, 2003The only time you will put it down is when you finish it. --
Peter Sutherland, Australian Cyclist Magazine, September 2003
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