FICTION
Review | 'The Autobiography of Fidel Castro': Quoting the despot, in 
matters large and small
A former friend of Castro sends him up in this mix of history and satire.
BY ANN LOUISE BARDACH
THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF FIDEL CASTRO. Norberto Fuentes. Translated by Anna 
Kushner. Norton. 572 pages. $27.95.
``No one owns the past, at least not until it is written,'' Fidel Castro 
shrewdly observes at the start of his faux ``autobiography'' -- the 
deliciously wicked construct devised by Norberto Fuentes. ``I've learned 
something else,'' Castro adds: ``the Revolution is always creating the 
past.''
In other words, as the cliche goes, history gets written by the winners. 
And therein lies the conceit of this entertaining, edifying and 
voluminous work that purports to channel the wily Cuban strongman. As 
served up by Fuentes, a Cuban intellectual who fled his homeland in 
1994, this brew of history and satire was originally published in 
Spanish at even greater length -- perhaps fitting for the famously 
verbose Castro. For the English-language version, the book has been 
tweaked and pruned. Most Cubaphiles will find Fuentes' effort to be a 
masterful act of ventriloquism, offering a Castro who is prideful, 
intuitively Machiavellian and relentlessly cynical.
``Almost all civil wars begin as a demonstration that goes out of 
control,'' Castro points out. ``Controlling the streets,'' he 
emphasizes, was the crucial key to his maintaining power. To that end, 
opponents -- or ``the enemy,'' as he puts it -- must not be allowed to 
gather ``in groups of more than two or three individuals.''
Fuentes' Maximum Leader holds forth on all matters great and small just 
as Castro, now Cuba's convalescent-in-chief, does in the hundreds of 
columns he has written for the state-run media since his medically 
mandated retirement after emergency intestinal surgery in July 2006.
Fuentes captures much of Castro, balancing the brilliant with the 
despotic. After all, he knows his man, having formerly been a Fidel 
literary favorite, along with Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Like the Colombian 
Nobelist, Fuentes is fascinated by Latin American strongmen -- and their 
enemies. (Rumor in Miami circles say that Fuentes also enjoys time with 
Luis Posada Carriles, Castro's would-be assassin of many decades.)
Fuentes contends that his ``autobiography'' is based on confirmable 
events and facts, but there is a smattering of minor errors of dates, 
names, etc. At one point, Fuentes writes that Castro's father died in 
1956 when his son was in the Sierra, when Fidel really was in Mexico. 
However, Fuentes is the beneficiary of the superb editing and 
translation of Anna Kushner, whose deftness reminds one of the deftness 
of Natasha Wimmer.
The continuous play between fact and fiction in the book is nicely 
augmented by the historic photographs that stud the text. Quite 
fittingly, it concludes with a 1986 photograph of Castro, his arm draped 
along the shoulder of a suited-up Fuentes, enjoying a whispered 
confidence from the writer-cum-courtier. Perhaps one man the 
comandante-en-jefe should not have trusted.
Ann Louise Bardach reviewed this book for The San Francisco Chronicle.
Review | 'The Autobiography of Fidel Castro': Quoting the despot, in 
matters large and small - Living - MiamiHerald.com (17 January 2010)
http://www.miamiherald.com/living/story/1427180.html
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