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Telex from Cuba

Telex from Cuba

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Author: Rachel Kushner
Creator: Lloyd James
Publisher: Tantor Media
Category: Book

List Price: $69.99
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 60 reviews
Sales Rank: 7294638

Format: Audiobook, Cd, Unabridged
Media: Audio CD
Edition: Library ed.
Number Of Items: 10
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 6.8 x 6.4 x 0.9

ISBN: 1400138345
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6
EAN: 9781400138340
ASIN: 1400138345

Publication Date: August 1, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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  • Audio CD - Telex from Cuba
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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Rachel Kushner's first novel, Telex from Cuba, doesn't read like your usual debut. Using family stories, extensive archival research, and all the tools of the novelist's imagination, she creates a portrait in many voices of a small society at a crucial moment in time: the American sugar cane and nickel-mining colony in the last years before Castro and the first moments of his revolution. As seen through the lives of the children and wives of American executives, and the parallel intrigues of a nightclub dancer with powerful friends and a former French collaborator--along with striking cameos by historical figures like the Castro brothers, Hemingway, and, yes, Colonel Sanders--Kushner's Cuba makes the raw materials of revolution, and its aftermath, come alive.

Questions for Rachel Kushner

Amazon.com: You're writing about the end of one era for Cuba at what may be the end of another. Was that in your mind as you wrote?

Kushner: It wasn't so much, actually, but that might be because I wrote the bulk of the book before Fidel fell ill with diverticulitis, and before the American media's obsession with his (like all of ours) eventual death hit a pitch point. Even now, I find this sense of waiting and the media's focus on it to be an odd tautology: the "breaking" story is often that there's a breaking story, but then the story never comes. Whether one agrees or disagrees with Fidel Castro's policies, his segue out of public view has been pretty brilliant. He trumped the media's deathwatch by stepping down, which took away the promise in his death: nothing substantial has changed to date, except the perception that his move away from the role of lider would precipitate change. I do hear he has more time to read now. Someone apparently gave him a copy of Telex from Cuba. I'd like to think he's reading it now, in that tracksuit that replaced the military fatigues.

Amazon.com: The kernel of your story was your mother's childhood, similar to some of those you describe in the book, growing up in Cuba as the daughter of an American mining executive. Did you hear her stories about that time during your own childhood? What did you add to them when you started doing your own research?

Kushner: I indeed heard lots of stories when I was a kid--Cuba has a real mythological importance to my mother and her sisters and how they think of themselves (my mother, for instance, was under the sway of their Jamaican houseboy, Cleveland, who is the inspiration for Willy in my book). My grandparents, dead for many years now, saved an incredible trove of stuff from their life in Cuba: every last receipt from the United Fruit commissary where my grandmother bought groceries, a mimeograph of every letter she sent, etc. I spent about three years going through this stuff, and interviewing my mother and her sisters and others theyd grown up with. But then I had to disconnect completely from all that, and build a fictional structure and then adhere precisely to its logic and requirements, which meant only using what served my story. Just because something is true does not mean it has a place. Often it turned out quite the opposite, that the people and characters and details I imagined were much more fluid and true seeming, and it was the "true life" detail that stuck out and seemed awkward.

That said, by so thoroughly metabolizing the "real" American colony, I was able to depict mine freehand, if you will, in a way that is (hopefully) convincing, that works as fiction but is a realm you can enter and see an erased world. I know that those who grew up in Nicaro have read the book and loved it, so that's nice. And there are many keys and arrows that point to or hint at real people and events, if amalgamations. Some of the American employees, for instance, were kidnapped and later invited to Raul's wedding. There was a Cuban investor who was a kind of interloper and got Batista's air force to strafe Nicaro, in order to drive the Americans out. I spoke on the phone to the former mine manager's wife, who told me that this Cuban investor threatened to kill her husband if he stayed. So thats a real-life detail. I guess there are many, but they are a bare-bones architecture; how fiction becomes fiction is less linear, more mysterious, and might I say difficult!

Amazon.com: This isn't your usual fiction debut, channeled through the perspective of a single navel. You take on a whole society's worth of voices, often in one scene (I'm thinking in particular of the wonderful party scene at the center of the book). Was that your intention from the beginning, or did you start with one perspective and then find yourself needing more?

Kushner: It's true, not one navel, and not my own, either. Probably that's partly why it took me so long to write it. I somehow always knew it would be a structure of multiple voices, rather than a single protagonist. I had become attached, from early on, to the idea--whether I have achieved it or not--of getting at the complex and varied forces of revolution and what led to it, i.e, how did the Americans participate, how did it constitute them, and the reverse, how did they affect it? There would have been no way to do this without rendering the story from multiple perspectives. Alejo Carpentier does it for the Haitian Revolution in The Kingdom of This World, for instance, with one narrator named Ti Noel, but he has this guy live about 200 years, so he can witness every significant juncture in the epic.

My problem was not a protracted timeframe, but a subtle network of dynamics: the American executives at United Fruit and the Nicaro Nickel Company were dealing with Batista and in denial of the revolution. But the revolution was obviously real, and so I needed to send some people up into the mountains to behold what was happening there. A disaffected narrator like La Maziere--like Rachel K, based on a real life figure of that same name--serves this role. Also, he cuts through a bit of the romance associated with revolutionary change. He's totally jaded and there for all the "wrong" reasons, an adventurer who sees violence as mystical, as a "pure" agent of change, if you will. And Rachel K was useful in that she could reveal some of what was happening in Havana and be close to the big political players in the government as well as the underground.

Lastly, a child who can see it all up close, like Everly, can reveal certain less mediated truths, without the more narrow judgments and strictures of adult thinking. Everly can hold contradiction in her mind and not be forced to resolve it, which is what maturity so often does to the process of thinking. On the other hand, in K.C. I wanted a child narrator who was looking back in hindsight, who has some degree of awareness, but not complete awareness, of how and whether his memories hold up over time: is the world he loves as benevolent as it had seemed to him as a child? Was it benevolent even then? Regardless, it's his childhood as well as a place, and he has a right to have his own feelings about his own childhood, even if the implications of it are so much larger than one boy's life.

Amazon.com: You leave yourself almost entirely out of the story, but there is one provocatively named character who apparently shares very little of your own biography: Rachel K. How did she come into the story, and how did she come to share your name?

Kushner: Actually, Rachel K is a real-life historic figure of pre-Castro Cuba, though specifically of the dictator Machado's era, and not Batista's. While I was researching the book, I came across a reference to her while reading Michael Chanan's comprehensive book about post-revolutionary films, The Cuban Image. Rachel K (no period after Kin every Cuban history reference, she is, as if sprung from a Kafkan universe, referred to this way) was a "French variety dancer" who became an icon after she was found mysteriously murdered in a hotel room. No one ever figured out what happened, and the mystery of her death came to signify the mortal decadence of Havana in the 1930s. The Cubans made a film about her in 1973 called The Strange Case of Rachel K. Because of her role in history, and in historical imagery, and due to the striking coincidence that her name is like mine, I felt it would be an act of exclusion not to put her in the book. I took the "cue" and ran with it, basically. And as you say, yeah, she is unlike me, which makes her perhaps a perverse or fun surrogate: she's discreet and dispassionate, qualities I wish I possessed, but in fact do not. Though perhaps she is my repressed double, "more me than me." On the surface I am much more like Everly: a goofy fabulist.

Amazon.com: You've visited Cuba a lot in recent years. What memories are there of the pre-Castro times and of the American presence?

Kushner: The residue is everywhere. There's the layer of it that many people know--the American cars, the rusted and burned-out neon signs for Woolworth's and Zenith Televisions et cetera in bigger cities like Havana and Santiago. In the Nipe Bay region, the northeastern part of what used to be called Oriente Province (now divided up) where my book takes place, suddenly, the residue is both less visible, and yet much, much stronger: the real story is there, lurking, and going there and excavating that residue was crucial to writing the book.

In Nicaro, for instance, it's a small mining town and there is no skeleton of midcentury American retail, and without an architectural heritage like you have in the cities, there was little to stop the Soviet-financed construction of huge Brutalist apartment buildings. So you don't think, shiny 1950s America when you get there. But everyone you speak to who is old enough knows they live in a former American colony, and when we went, all the Jamaicans and Haitians who had worked as butlers in the houses of my grandparents and their friends are still there, and they told me stories about the town in its colonial, er, heyday. The managers row, which features in my book, is still there, and the biggest house, which the mine administrator lived in, is now a school. Fidel had a real axe to grind with Nicaro--not unfounded, by any means--and I'm sure the children are aware that the facility's benefactor is a banished "yanqui" landlord.

Preston, the United Fruit Company town, has been renamed, but it was an American town in every way. United Fruit built the entire infrastructure, the roads, the electricity, ran their own mail service, the trains, shipping, everything. The town they built is still there, and the houses, once uniformly "company property" even in paint scheme (all over Central and South America United Fruit painted their towns a particular shade of mustard yellow) have never been repainted. And so what paint is still there is a palimpsest of the Old Order: faded patches of mustard yellow linger on the weathered exterior of every house. The old company hotel where my mother used to sit on the porch and sip her cane juice, waiting for my grandmother to shop, is still there, but it has no windows and the tile floors are cracked. United Fruit departed very quickly when Fidel nationalized the mills, and they left a huge cache of company records, which I discovered behind a chainlink fence in the back of the public library in Banes. The Cubans know it's part of their history, which is why it's in the library, but like every other detail of American life, its state of decay, moldering under a leaky roof, is part of the allure: a history erased, but not completely

Amazon.com: My strongest sense of that moment (until I read your book) was from one of my favorite movies, the glorious documentary, I Am Cuba. Did that play a role in helping you imagine the times?

Kushner: Funny you should ask, because one of the images on my website, www.telexfromcuba.com, is a still I made from I Am Cuba, of women in a poolside beauty contest, to depict what La Maziere means when he speaks of a place "where dreams are marbled with nothingness"--i.e., a place simultaneously at a height and in decline, upon which he's projecting his own knowledge of decline, having lived through the German occupation of Paris and their subsequent departure eastward, as they were crushed by the Allies and the party was over. I thought a lot about whether or not to use this image, because the film was not made in the fifties, but in 1964, and moreover with a real political agenda. That said, it is indeed an amazing film, and the tracking shot into the swimming pool at the beginning is right up there with the tracking shot at the beginning of Touch of Evil as a stunning technical feat (and was even replicated by Paul Thomas Anderson in the opening of Boogie Nights). But I Am Cuba is more than just beautiful and strange. It is, as I said, extremely dogmatic, it's a piece of propaganda, really, and yet it is one of only a handful of films that you show you what prerevolutionary Havana might have looked like. There are no films made in the fifties that actually portray life in Havana at that time, at least that I am aware of. It's the closest thing, despite its dogma. And even its dogma can take on a kind of surreal charm: the "evil" Americans are all played by Russians, who have these heavy and angular Slavic jaws. Also, they speak with Russian accents.



Product Description
An astonishingly wise, ambitious, and riveting novel set in the American community in Cuba during the years leading to Castro's revolution, this masterful debut will put Rachel Kushner on the map of American fiction.


Customer Reviews:   Read 55 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars A Cuban story you're not likely to see from the outside   November 17, 2008
"Telex From Cuba" is the tale of the last days of American involvement in Cuba in the 1950s, as seen from the viewpoints of a disparate crew of characters, and written with passion and enormous understanding by Rachael Kushner, whose mother grew up in Oriente Province (the same province the Castro family was from). I don't know what I expected from the book, but I was pleasantly surprised. Miss Kushner weaves a story so tightly connected that you will be wiping the sweat from your face as you read it; you'll smell the night flowers; you'll see the squalor of the cane cutter's huts. There is an indefineable menace throughout the book; the hint that no one is who they seem to be, and that a lot of people in here can be reduced to murder at the drop of a hat. The political play here, over an island nation that has changed hands and allegiances so many times over the past five centuries, seems intrinsically unstable and bound for disaster, and the different players in the sociodrama are aptly and realistically drawn. I have always been fascinated by Cuba, and "Telex From Cuba" only fed my obsession. This book grabs you from the outset and takes you on an interesting...and dangerous...ride, through a time of explosive change.


5 out of 5 stars A contemporary "Ship of Fools"... superb writing!   November 17, 2008
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

It's an actual pleasure when an exceptional novel emerges from the morass of juvenilia which we have seen from publishers in recent years. "Telex from Cuba" is a retrospective of elitist American life in Cuba, chiefly in the ten years or so prior to Fidel Castro's ultimate rise to power in 1959.

You realize that you're reading a truly great book when, as you approach the conclusion, you wish the book wasn't ending so soon. Such is the case with Rachel Kushner's outstanding work in this instance. Kushner, fairly young to have produced a text of this maturity, faced a bulwark of difficulties when she began this book (whether she knew this or not!):

1. She relates much of the story in first person (always difficult) through her protagonist who happens to be MALE. Since the work is nostalgic in its ambiance this would be quite cumbersome but she managed to pull it off with a detailed finesse.

2. She faced the dilemma of writing a fictional account of an actual, well-known story, an endeavor which does not often result in success. A case in point (of a failed attempt -- see my full review): Crippen: A Novel of Murder

3. Writing fictional social commentary in retrospect about an era that preceded her birth would have represented a monumental task. Kushner succeeds where fiasco has often been the result in similar cases where various authors have tried to convey the intricacies of a culture which was foreign to them, either in time or custom.



This is not a book that I would ever have purchased at the book store and, in fact, was an alternate Vine Program pick for me when the books which I actually wanted to read and review were already grabbed up. So I entered into this read with a highly critical eye. As a result, I must report that this tale is nearly flawless from a technical aspect, a caveat which much-pleased me.

This book shares many common themes with Katherine Anne Porter's Ship of Fools, even though the two works embody different topics and were written about different historical eras and events. They each address racism, sociological isolation, rampant ignorance and stupidity among the principal characters, political intrigue, sexual tension, and exotic settings. I enjoyed both books equally, albeit, Porter's Magnum opus was published much earlier, in 1962, (it took her 20 years to write it!)

Summing up Kushner's 322-page story: An American family in Cuba, prior to Castro's dictatorship, is compelled to endure ever-increasing disasters initiated by local Cuban freedom-fighters in response to government and corporate repression of the masses. The patriarch of the family, Malcolm Stites, is a brutal businessman who directs the activities of the notorious United Fruit Company on the eastern end of the politically unstable island country. As the idea of self-determination catches on with the indigenous people, as well as with imported laborers, Stites has to deal more and more with the rebels and their insurgent activities. The Camel's back is broken beyond repair when Stites' eldest son runs off into the mountains to join up with the rebels, subsequently carrying out espionage activities against his father's own company. The work's protagonist is the younger of Stites' two sons.

Of course, Stites employs a broad pecking order of American employees who supervise and administer operations at various tiers throughout the organization, from the nice old paymaster down to a yet-to-be-convicted murderer imported from Cajun Country, along with his entire clan, and who deals with the workers directly.

Who else do we encounter throughout the course of this story? Taking into account some overlapping of the numerous eclectic personalities, the list includes, teen lovers; despots; prostitutes; the numerous downtrodden indigenous peoples of Cuba; imported and exploited laborers (cane cutters) from other Caribbean islands; revolutionaries; criminals; dictators; displaced Cajuns; American robber-barons; desperate housewives; cuckolders; Henry Cabot Lodge; Desi Arnaz; Xavier Cugat, and; an ostentatious and drunken Ernest Hemingway! Perhaps the reader of this review can now better envision my stated parallels with "Ship of Fools."

Some of Kushner's writings astounded me in their accuracy and realism. Here's a quotation which expands upon a little-known secret of the arsonist:

"In an abandoned hut out in the cane cutters' batey, the Allain brothers had found stacks of notices calling for a strike, and flyers with arson instructions and diagrams: `tie a kerosene-soaked rag to the tail of a rat and [after lighting the rag] let him loose in the cane. A cat would work too.'" (p. 184)

From my early days as a professional Park Ranger, I can tell you that many forest fires were set by rotten arsonists who utilized this very heinous technique (typically using some unfortunate stray cat or dog) throughout Appalachia both during and subsequent to this same era in Cuba.

Kushner's incredibly subtle and prickly humor also challenges the reader's alertness: "Mrs. Billing said that there was no place for garlic and boiled yucca at her house. She'd trained her staff to cook reasonable American dishes, and now all she had to do was train them to eat reasonable-sized portions. She said her servants ate enormous piles of food. The others listening concurred, and Mrs. Lederer asked how it could be that none of the servants were a bit fat, while she and Mr. Lederer were constantly on reduction diets," (page 117.)

Under my closest scrutiny, I only encountered one minor glitch when, in fact, I was prepared to encounter many more. This may sound petty to some but I mention it only to punctuate how thorough Kushner was in her intricate knowledge of the Cuban culture and in her fact-checking:

"On the foam, which looked like a hunk of ceiling insulation, she'd written `Panda's Pillow' in magic marker, so no one else would use it," (page 97.) This is an anachronism. While Sidney Rosenthal actually invented a rudimentary felt-tipped pen in 1953, these marker pens were really not around in general use until 1958 when Carter, Inc. came out with its aluminum tube version of the felt marker pen. I clearly recall, here in high-tech America, when I first saw and used one in the mid-60s. In any case, the name "Magic Marker" name was not manifest until 1966 which is when Rosenthal re-named his company "The Magic Marker Corporation" and Kushner's reference to "magic marker" precedes this by many years.

Rachel Kushner clearly garnered much of this story vicariously, through her mother, who lived in pre-Castro Cuba. I don't grasp exactly how she did it, but the reader is drawn into the tale as if the author had lived through these life experiences herself. I found this to be an astounding achievement. And here we encounter a female author who writes about hunting, fishing, and other typically male rites of passage with an incredibly convincing cleverness.

This is a poster example of intelligent and maturely-written contemporary literature and I'm eagerly looking forward to reading more of Kushner's works. Highly recommended!



4 out of 5 stars Vivid perspective, Yanqui style   November 17, 2008
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

Although I am not much of a reader of novels, I rather enjoyed this one. The tale of the last days of Cuba before Castro is seen (mostly) through the eyes of privileged American expats. What makes it interesting is that the perspective is that of the young, as two of the main characters are only teenagers when the walls come tumbling down. For KC Stites, the revolution in part means the demolition of any hopes he might have had for starting a relationship Everly Lederer. "We might have gone steady if Castro hadn't screwed it up," isn't the usual analysis of the revolution I would expect.

I found the shift between KC's first-person narrative and the third-person narrative in the rest of the book to be a little off-putting, and I'm still not sure why Kushner chose to do this. The tone of KC Stites' narrative changed from the beginning (where he almost sounds a little girly) to a more jaded & weary tone by the conclusion. Again, I don't totally understand this, as he presumably is reminiscing about the entire Cuban experience at the same time.

I found the best sections of the novel were those dealing with the wonderfully amoral de La Maziere, who really is the most interesting character in the book. Kushner shows really mastery of all the shades of gray when she is writing for this far-from-simple character.

I'm glad I read it. I look forward to more works from Rachel Kushner.



4 out of 5 stars Impressive Debut Novel   November 17, 2008
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

TELEX FROM CUBA is an ambitious novel--both highly intelligent and readable. It takes place in the half decade or so before Castro came to power and we view the cultural and political climate of the island primarily through the eyes of the inhabitants of an American (business) community--many of whom are children. This enclave was a world of luxury and excess set against the background of Cuba's dire poverty.

Although it is felt the book told an excellent story--if I have one criticism, it is that it sometimes appeared to ramble. This may be due to the story being told from numerous perspectives. It might have been tighter had the story stayed with the Americans. A case in point: to offset what was going on in the enclave, there was a subplot wherein a cabaret dancer/stripper in Havana forms a relationship with Christian de La Maziere, a French former arms merchant (and Nazi) turned Cuban revolutionary. To me, this relationship and its unfolding did little to advance the story. Along the way, we meet a wide array of celebrities associated with Cuba. Hemingway is mentioned several times. There are some very humorous moments that take place in his favorite Havana bar, the Floridita. Desi Arnaz and Xavier Cugat also make an appearance.

For a first novel, TELEX FROM CUBA, shows an inordinate amount of polish and promise. It brings to life a place most Americans have not seen--and may never. We settle for portraits painted by gifted authors.



4 out of 5 stars Americans out of Cuba in 1958 - a rare story   November 13, 2008
 11 out of 11 found this review helpful

Rachel Kushner timed the publication of her first novel really well. This year, with the fiftieth anniversary of the Cuban revolution, "Telex from Cuba" can provide a great read for those interested in the events leading to the revolution of 1958 in Cuba.

Written mostly from the perspective of the last American inhabitants of Cuba, this ambitious, carefully researched novel provides a fresh insight into the life at the end of American colonial era on the island. Kushner recreates the world of parties, luxuries and sharp contrasts between American company management and the Cuban workers in the poorest, Eastern Oriente province, where time seems to stand still and the American live in oblivion... Or - do they?

Multiple voices round up the novel and make it whole. The most important are the perspective of those, who were children at that time (children prove again to be astonishingly perceptive and aware of the situation more than their parents): K. C. Stites, a younger son of the manager of the United Fruit Company, based in Preston, and Everly Lederer (whose voice I like most), a sensitive girl, middle daughter of a manager of the nickel mine from Nicaro. We learn the stories of the American families who decide to move to Cuba (successful entrepreneurs or losers?), seeing the whole plethora of people attracted by easy money and life in the tropics with servants and all the luxuries of the colonial life. The other American point of view from Oriente is Mrs Mackey, who is an adult, but she is extraordinarily childlike in her observations and alienation from the "society", and her hopeless affair.

The contrast to these perspectives is provided by the chapters describing the pursuits of a Mr Maziere, a French agitator and distributor of weapons, who is only too happy to be in the middle of a political stirrup, which he nimbly uses for his own financial advantage, as he did during the war in France and in the conflict between Dominican Republic and Haiti. Mr Maziere makes a useful contact in Havana, when he meets the influential cabaret dancer, Rachel K., who is a confidante of a former president Prio, current dictator- Batista, and the revolutionaries Fidel and Raul Castro.

When the sugar cane plantations in Oriente are torched by the guerillas from the mountains and the boat of jolly men coming back from yet another party is kidnapped, the Americans start to realize their time in Cuba is inevitably coming to an end.

I liked Kushner's insightful story, and the dense prose full of information, but I felt like something was lacking - the novel reads well, but it reads a bit like a history book, a massive, although interesting background is drowning the crucial events, and the end is, of course, known to the reader from the beginning. The novel is certainly original, and for me at least, a very good history lesson. Maybe that's enough. I am not sure.

I usually do not comment on book cover designs, but in this case I absolutely hate the cover. Maybe it is supposed to create the atmosphere of the 1950's, but I think it is very unattractive and actually does not help the sales of this novel, which is much better than the cover suggests.


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