Expat Cuban Launches Book Collection
By ANITA SNOW
Associated Press Writer
HAVANA (AP) — Trying to build cultural bridges, the daughter of
a well-known revolutionary who later turned against Fidel Castro is
launching a new series of books by authors from the island and
abroad.
``Through books we become closer — we form, we sculpt, we reinvent
Cuba,'' Patricia Gutierrez-Menoyo said as she presented her
publishing house's new Cuban Cultural Collection to a crowded
hall at Havana's International Book Festival on Friday.
The nine books by diverse writers do not touch on political subjects,
and Gutierrez-Menoyo said she had no problem getting
permission from the Cuban government to sell them.
First presented late last year at an international book fair in
Miami, the Spanish-language collection includes ``El viaje mas largo (The
Longest Journey)'' a novel by Leonardo Padura, a writer who lives
on the island; ``Mi vida saxual (My Sax-ual Life),'' a biography by
Cuban exile musician Paquito D'Rivera; and ``Mitos y Leyendas
(Myths and Legends),'' a colorful mix of centuries-old Cuban beliefs
and recipes by Natalia Bolivar, one of the country's leading
experts on Afro-Cuban religions.
Gutierrez-Menoyo, who owns the Plaza Mayor publishing house in
San Juan, Puerto Rico, said she funded the collection through
proceeds from textbooks she prints because she saw ``a need to
rescue our culture.''
``I'm reinventing our culture, because we are losing it,'' Gutierrez-Menoyo said after the presentation.
``For the last 43 years we have not had enough ways for all of
us to be Cuban together, no matter where we have lived'' she said,
referring to the start of the Cuban revolution that brought Castro
to power. ``We hope this will help.''
Gutierrez-Menoyo, now in her 30s, has lived firsthand the pain and nostalgia of Cubans separated by geography and political belief.
Her father, Eloy Gutierrez-Menoyo, was a commander who fought alongside Castro during the revolution in the late 1950s.
The elder Gutierrez-Menoyo later broke ranks and went to Miami,
where he became military leader for the newly formed anti-Castro
group Alpha 66. In 1964, he landed in Cuba with three men in
hopes of launching an armed uprising. But he was captured and went
on to spend 22 years in Cuban prisons.
Today, he lives in Miami where his organization Cambio Cubano promotes peaceful dialogue with Castro.
``It is the hour to establish a dialogue,'' said writer Amir Valle,
whose contribution to the collection is ``Las puertas de la noche (The
Doors of the Night),'' described as a dark novel that explores
the diverse roots of Cuban identity. Valle, who lives on the island, said
the younger Gutierrez-Menoyo had ``a very Cuban heart, even though
she was born in Miami.''
The new collection ``is an embrace that stretches the width of
the island and extends all the way to Miami,'' Cuban writer Guillermo
Jimenez said at the event.
The writers also said the collection gave Cuban authors living in exile a chance to publish works that are not blatantly political.
Cuban writer Pedro Perez-Sarduy, who now lives in London, said
he had a hard time publishing the novel based on his mother's
remembrances, ``Las criadas de La Habana (The Maids of Havana),''
because ``it wasn't anti-Castro.'' A little more than a year after
it was accepted by Plaza Mayor, the book was in print.
Carmen Duarte, who lives in Miami, said being able to present
her novel ``Hasta la vuelta (Until the turn),'' at book fairs in both Miami
and Havana helped establish ``a road of communication, of understanding,
between Cubans who live on the island and those who
live abroad.''