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Hardcover The Rainy Season: Haiti Since Duvalier Book

ISBN: 0671641867

ISBN13: 9780671641863

The Rainy Season: Haiti Since Duvalier

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Considered the best book ever written about Haiti, now updated with a New Introduction, "After the Earthquake," features first hand-reporting from Haiti weeks after the 2010 earthquake. Through a... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Amazing journalism

Amy Wilentz is the best kind of journalist: a great writer, but also a person who spent the time--often in courageous circumstances--to know her subjects deeply. Her portraits of the people she met and events she experienced in Haiti, along with her lively dissertations on Haiti's history, are vivid and poignant. Her images have embedded themselves in my mind and haunted my dreams.

Topnotch reportage

Ms. Wilentz has created a fascinating account of life and politics in this turbulent country. Definitely worth reading even for those with no particular interest in Haiti.

Essential history for those interested in Haiti

In The Rainy Season, Wilentz leads the reader through the world of Haiti and its people, both those who are corrupt and those who struggle each day against corruption. I will visit Haiti for the 6th time this summer but I have not previously read anything in-depth about Haitian history. This book opened my eyes to essential information that every traveller to Haiti should be aware of, out of respect to the violent history of Haiti and the people who have survived through it. No one should attempt to "help" the Haitian people without first understanding the results of "help" already rendered in the past. Wilentz makes these (often tragic) results clear, and humbles all of us in the process.If you have gone to Haiti, or will go to Haiti, whether as a missionary, journalist, diplomat, or foreign aid worker, don't go ignorant. Read The Rainy Season (and more recent publications as well) first.

Haiti in the interim

If you are trying to figure out the muddle that is Haitian political history, this book can help. Covering Haiti from the fall of Baby Doc until early 1989, Willentz gives a close-up look at the parade of dictators and terrorists running the (in theory) post-Duvalier country. She also provides a personal connection to Aristide, then a radical priest continually in hiding from a government wishing to silence him. In addition to the internal political movements and terrorism, Willentz shows us the ties between Haiti's troubles and the United States. If you are not familiar with American policy in regard to Haiti, you will be in for a disappointing and infuriating surprise. We sucked!The book also covers the standards to be found in every book on Haiti: voodoo, illiteracy, slave revolution rememberings, hunger, poverty, exploitation, class and racial imbalances.Perhaps its greatest asset is the datedness of the text. Written after Duvalier and before Aristide, the view of both is fairly unbiased. If you want to learn more about Haiti's past, present and future, you should check this one out.

A great book on a country too often ignored

I just finished reading a copy of this book I found in a second-hand store. It's too bad it is out of print, because it is brilliant. It covers the period from 1986 to 1989, so it is a bit out of date -- a lot has happened in Haiti since then. But it remains relevant because it paints a vivid portrait of how challenging it is to change Haiti, something that remains true today. If you can find it, read it.
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