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Fidel Castro Book Unveiled: Castro Already At Work On Volume 2

ANDREA RODRIGUEZ   08/ 3/10 04:07 PM ET   AP

Castro Book

HAVANA — Fidel Castro's new book spins tales of his childhood, university years and life through his 20s in his whimsical and long-winded style – but contains little information that hasn't appeared in other sources.

The 833-page "The Strategic Victory" on the battle that helped speed him to power in 1959 is not yet available to the general public. However, The Associated Press obtained a copy Tuesday from those distributed during a special, closed-door unveiling Monday night attended by Castro himself.

Castro said he was surprised that the book is being released mere weeks after he completed it and has already begun work on a second volume.

The son of a wealthy though unrefined landowner, Castro was educated in Roman Catholic schools, joined a gun-toting radical student group while studying law at the University of Havana and launched a disastrous attack on a Cuban military barracks in the eastern city of Santiago, where nearly all participants were killed or captured.

He was eventually freed into exile in Mexico, returned to Cuba and began a guerrilla struggle in the Sierra Maestra mountains in the island's east that led to the ouster of dictator Fulgencio Batista.

Though Castro has authored numerous books – this one is his second since a 2006 health crisis forced him to cede power to his younger brother Raul – publishers have long clamored for a chance to publish his complete memoirs.

The book is not meant to be a memoir, but contains an autobiographical section in the introduction.

Castro includes impressions of his early years, such as when his parents sent him to Santiago to attend school, but he instead remained at home for a year with a foster family that never enrolled him.

It offers some dreadfully dry details about his college days, during which he had no choice but to carry a gun, he said, and tried but failed to win major class office. The story follows him as he became increasingly involved in the anti-government underground while in his 20s.

But it only confirms what has appeared in past unauthorized biographies or his spoken autobiographies.

The book focuses on an important battle in 1958 that saw Castro's forces prevail over thousands of government soldiers in the Sierra Maestra. That victory paved the way for Batista to flee Cuba the following New Year's Day.

Organizers of Monday's book launch said 3,500 copies would be made available in coming days and 50,000 copies would eventually be published.

The book has 25 chapters and features maps, photos and illustrations of the weapons that Castro's bearded rebels used during the fighting with government forces. There are also color reproductions of notes scrawled by Castro and his chief subordinates.

Castro disappeared almost completely from public view after undergoing emergency intestinal surgery in July 2006, but has suddenly begun making almost daily public appearances lately.

He turns 84 on Aug. 13, has not been seen publicly with Raul and has skipped major political events. Still, he has been popping up in other, unlikely places, from a meeting with Cuban ambassadors at the foreign ministry to the dolphin show at the Havana aquarium.

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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:51 PM on 08/04/2010
He should have become full time writer not long after the revolution. Instead he decided to stay as top dog for the rest of his life (how presumptuous), delaying Cuba's progress. Now he is passing the baton to his brother, not much unlike Kim Jong-il from North Korea who is passing the baton to his son.
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09:09 PM on 08/04/2010
Actually, you are thinking of Kim il-Sung who past it to his son Kim Jong-il.
Kim the 1st was a revolutionary, Kim the 2nd was a rich and powerful man's spoiled son.
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07:19 AM on 08/05/2010
I did mean Kim Jong-il who is in the process of grooming his son Kim Jong-un to succeed him in the future. Cuba, North Korea, and other so call "communist" countries are more like Saudi Arabia, i.e Kingdoms.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tsar Bomba
Socialism Now!
09:22 AM on 08/04/2010
I wonder how many constitution loving free speech conservatives will call for the banning of this book?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jsgaetano
Semper Fidelis Tyrannosaurus!
11:00 AM on 08/04/2010
They don't want to ban it, they want to burn it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cabinetmaniac
"Without a struggle, there can be no progress. "
02:01 PM on 08/04/2010
Since they haven't the wit to read it.

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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
10:28 PM on 08/03/2010
This guy's going to survive the apocalypse.
10:19 PM on 08/03/2010
Although life is difficult for most Cubans, especially those without access to hard currencies, still the Revolution should be proud of its many accomplishments (education, medical care, full employment etc.). Many predicted its immanent collapse in the early 1990's, but Cuba managed to re-invent itself as a tourist destination (thus the ensuing evil of the dual economy). Much of the younger generation is alienated and wants major change--freedom to travel, freedom to set up businesses not controlled by the state, etc.--and change is coming, and coming fast. Like China, however, it will be a controlled transition. Compared with the the poverty, violence and social chaos of many other Latin American nations, where the disparity between the rich and poor is shocking, Cuba is stable. (In Cuba almost everyone is poor, but at least not starving). During frequent visits to Cuba (starting in 1959 and up 'til the present) I have never felt unsafe walking the streets of Habana or Santiago or any of the provincial cities in between. Although "mistakes have been made," in the twilight of his life Fidel can truly say, "History will absolve me!"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TStringfellow
Wobbly, politically and literally
02:02 AM on 08/04/2010
Agreed. Great post.
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TAIsabel
Suffer no fools.
09:10 AM on 08/04/2010
Thank you and agree! As a Cuban who lived through the Batista years, the Revolution, the exile and the return visit to Cuba some years ago, I can attest to the veracity of your statement.

The propaganda that Cubans are all oppressed and hate Castro is nonsense. They may not have X-boxes, Jersey Shore shows, I-pods, and many of the inane entertainments and luxuries we waste our time and effort on but, everyone I met in Cuba looked healthy, had great teeth and and an education.

I travelled all over, in a rented car and picked up hitchhikers (yes, Cubans do not own cars, I know), never felt threatened and was impressed by the education and emotional elegance of those I picked up. There are downfalls to the system, to be sure. I saw a few and know that they have gone overboard with the control but, this is changing too.

The fact that Cuba is a mere 90 miles from the US, that it has suffered 45 years of embargo from the Us and that it has been the target of hundreds of attempts to destabilize it but still stands independent and strong, is a testament to the Cuban people and their commitment to a system that we have yet to understand. Like China, it too will evolve. History will absolve Castro, I think it already has.
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mixpiklix
09:49 PM on 08/03/2010
it's his story he can tell how he wants unlike the people he governs
09:41 PM on 08/03/2010
Fidel, Che, and Raul were able to overthrow the dictator Batista because of several conditions in the country. Such conditions were:

~ Americans owned 70 % of the arable land.
~ 1% of the population controlled 46 % of the wealth.
~ Batista’s goons and secret police killed 20,000 Cubans (tortured even more).
~ 40 % of the population were illiterate.
~ 50 % of the population lived in Bohio shacks.
~ Dissidents were hung and left to dangle in the streets as a warning sign.
~ The Mafia (Meyer Lansky & Co) ran Havana and used Cuba as a whorehouse for rich gringos from the U.S.
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TAIsabel
Suffer no fools.
09:11 AM on 08/04/2010
Correct!
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JayMonaco
09:33 AM on 08/04/2010
Yeah, what's your point? Revolutions, successful or otherwise, are always predicated by similar or equivalent conditions.
09:29 PM on 08/03/2010
Think he included how he and his band of thieves stole (or as the politely say, "expropriated") everything from everyone and threw in jail or executed anyone who stood in their way? Hmmmmmmmm?
09:41 PM on 08/03/2010
The U.$. Aggression that Fidel has heroically fought against …
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbjr_cPS9_A
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GuyCybershy
09:45 PM on 08/03/2010
If you would like to get rid of the Castros then get rid of the stupid embargo. That is what has kept them in power so long
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RudyHaugeneder
08:04 PM on 08/03/2010
Fidel Castro has outlasted several American presidents and his Cuba is still a relaxed, unified and relatively democratic nation compared to many others, despite the brutal economic embargo the US government has imposed on it.
If Mr. Castro was a fraction as bad as the American media make him to be, he would have been overthrown decades ago. Again, nearby Cuba is relatively free compared to many countries America totally supports and has a tiny, tiny fraction of the violent dissidents in jail compared to the USA and its vastly overcrowded prisons.
If Cuba were a bad place to live, there would be constant violent protest well-covered by the US media, including this news site, that would shame the grizzly mayhem going on elsewhere against governments propped up by American military aid.
08:28 PM on 08/03/2010
spoken like someone who has spent no (or very little) time there
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RudyHaugeneder
08:48 PM on 08/03/2010
We Canadians are not under government restrictions as to where we can visit or not. We are actually free.
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TAIsabel
Suffer no fools.
09:13 AM on 08/04/2010
No, spoken like someone who is not subject to the propaganda machine. How much time have you spent in Cuba?
09:42 PM on 08/03/2010
"If Mr. Castro was a fraction as bad as the American media make him to be, he would have been overthrown decades ago."

If they had the same right to bear arms then you could make a statement like this. You really have no clue of what you are talking about. Ask any Cuban that risked their lives in a raft to get out of that place if they agree with your comments? I live in South Florida and I have not seen any of them taking the same risk to get back to Cuba.
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JayMonaco
09:34 AM on 08/04/2010
As for the rafts...well, some people will do anything to make money.
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tombollocks
11:44 AM on 08/04/2010
Flying coach to Bahamas and then to Cuba would be more comfortable than taking a raft back. :D
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75thRanger
Though I Be The Lone Survivor
07:02 PM on 08/03/2010
Would love to see a poll on how many HP members will buy this book....probably 93%. Sad.

“Sua Sponte”

1917, 1928, 1952, 1990
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uncc49er
Only the truth and nothing more
09:04 PM on 08/03/2010
right on man. He is a hero to the libs.
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Bruce Forbes
Marx was right.
12:43 PM on 08/04/2010
Better that than Beck or Palin.
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75thRanger
Though I Be The Lone Survivor
12:52 PM on 08/04/2010
Really "Bruce"? So you love the Communist party? Oh yeah Castro is a hero right? I bet you love Che as well. You do realize that these guys founded Cuba's "labor camp" system the system that was eventually employed to incarcerate gays, dissidents, and AIDS victims. Yeah these guys are way better than Palin and Beck.

Do yourself a favor and crack open a history book or two.

“Sua Sponte”

1917, 1928, 1952, 1990
03:43 AM on 08/05/2010
really?

beck and palin haveKilled thousands of innocent people?

jailed thousands of political prisoners for just speaking out against their govt?

and have enslaved an entire nation?

because, if they haven't i dont see how you could say they were worse that fidel
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WylieSD
No, I don't apologize
06:45 PM on 08/03/2010
That explains the traffic. Progressives ran out to buy the book.