The Day Fidel Died

Cuba in the Age of Raúl, Obama, and the Rolling Stones

$0.99 US
Knopf | Vintage
On sale Oct 31, 2017 | 978-0-8041-7240-0
Sales rights: US, Canada, Open Mkt
Cuba has loomed large in American memory and history. Throughout the last half-century, the island and its larger-than-life revolutionary leader have been key players in the Cold War and mythologized by Americans and American politicians. In 2016, relations thawed, and the country opened its doors to American. The Rolling Stones played in Havana. President Obama arrived too in March. He was the first President to visit the nation almost 100 years—since Coolidge in 1928. And then Fidel Castro passed away in November 2016, marking the end of the momentous era in Cuban history.

In The Day Fidel Died, Patrick Symmes interweaves reporting from years spent traveling to the Cuban Island, a narrative history of the rise of Fidelismo and the last sixty-plus years of life there under Fidel. Symmes’ exploration of the Castros’ Cuba—how it came to be and what it’s becoming—paints a wondrous and striking portrait of the nation, its culture, politics and people for anyone first undertaking a trip or those still dreaming of doing so. 


A Vintage Shorts ebook original.
Praise for Patrick Symmes' The Boys from Dolores:

"An atmospheric, richly evocative history of modern Cuba....Mr. Symmes digs like a reporter and writes like a novelist." —The New York Times Book Review

"Symmes is...a superb journalist. His interviews with the Dolorinos form a priceless archive of the Cuban diaspora and argue for the importance of the storyteller's art." —The Washington Post

"Vividly original.” —The Boston Globe

"What [Symmes] has is heart, and his observations are on the money. A travel writer, Symmes delivers a muscular prose and a keen sense of detail." —The Miami Herald

About

Cuba has loomed large in American memory and history. Throughout the last half-century, the island and its larger-than-life revolutionary leader have been key players in the Cold War and mythologized by Americans and American politicians. In 2016, relations thawed, and the country opened its doors to American. The Rolling Stones played in Havana. President Obama arrived too in March. He was the first President to visit the nation almost 100 years—since Coolidge in 1928. And then Fidel Castro passed away in November 2016, marking the end of the momentous era in Cuban history.

In The Day Fidel Died, Patrick Symmes interweaves reporting from years spent traveling to the Cuban Island, a narrative history of the rise of Fidelismo and the last sixty-plus years of life there under Fidel. Symmes’ exploration of the Castros’ Cuba—how it came to be and what it’s becoming—paints a wondrous and striking portrait of the nation, its culture, politics and people for anyone first undertaking a trip or those still dreaming of doing so. 


A Vintage Shorts ebook original.

Praise

Praise for Patrick Symmes' The Boys from Dolores:

"An atmospheric, richly evocative history of modern Cuba....Mr. Symmes digs like a reporter and writes like a novelist." —The New York Times Book Review

"Symmes is...a superb journalist. His interviews with the Dolorinos form a priceless archive of the Cuban diaspora and argue for the importance of the storyteller's art." —The Washington Post

"Vividly original.” —The Boston Globe

"What [Symmes] has is heart, and his observations are on the money. A travel writer, Symmes delivers a muscular prose and a keen sense of detail." —The Miami Herald