Certain years are pivotal in global history, and one such year was 1959, from which this book takes its title. 1959 was indeed a historic year during which, among other historic events, Fidel Castro’s guerrilla war in Cuba toppled dictator Fulgencio Batista.
This intriguing book, drawn from the pages of the author’s English-language weekly newspaper, the Haiti Sun, and from his notebooks, provides a journalist’s firsthand look at Papa Doc’s reaction—at first easing, then tightening even more brutally his tyrannical rule. Diederich then traces the ensuing impacts on Haiti’s relations with the U.S., other Caribbean nations, the rest of the Western Hemisphere, and the international community.
1959 is a historically compelling book that traces a pivotal year that began with Fidel Castro’s victory in Cuba, which triggered reverberations that changed the Caribbean.
Author(s): Bernard Diederich
Publisher: Markus Wiener Publishers
Year: 2009
Language: English
City: Princeton, N.J.
Introduction
Chapter 1: Pact with the Devil
Chapter 2: Hello Fidel
Chapter 3: Late Night Meeting with Doc
Chapter 4: The Castro Effect
Chapter 5: Caribbean Cold War
Chapter 6: Disappearing Critics; Trujillo Agents Active in Havana
Chapter 7: Chasing Zombies
Chapter 8: Let Them Starve
Chapter 9: First Plane Hijacked to Cuba
Chapter 10: Doc the Body-Snatcher
Chapter 11: Barbudos and U.S. Marines
Chapter 12: Papa Doc Is Dead?
Chapter 13: Resurrecting Papa Doc
Chapter 14: Killings that Sealed El Jefe’s Fate
Chapter 15: Algerian-Led Invasion
Chapter 16: The Bizarre Morgan Plot
Chapter 17: Catholic Church on Its Knees
Chapter 18: Return of the Sun
Chapter 19: To the Sacred Waters
Chapter 20: May I Borrow Your Saints?
Chapter 21: Love in the Time of Papa Doc
Notes