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Fidel and Che

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Che Guevara has been dead for more than forty years, and long ago renounced by Fidel Castro-and yet they are forever linked: their coming to prominence together captivated a generation.

For many, their romantic struggle for freedom still resonates; for others, they simply represent the last of a dying breed of rebel warriors.

Yet, while much has been written about them both, surprisingly little is known about their personalities, and even less about the 12 years of their unique and highly consequential relationship, during which they linked arms in one of the world's greatest revolutionary movements. Fidel and Che follows them on their dramatic journey from the safe houses of Mexico's political underground in the 1950s, where they began hatching their plan for revolution, to the theatre of war in the Cuban mountains, to the paneled offices of a new government (the Bay of Pigs and Cuban Missile crises happened on their watch), and to the eventual rupture of their friendship, as Che left Cuba to pursue his revolutionary dreams, only to be assassinated by the CIA in 1966.

Reid-Henry also reveals the more personal world of their inner lives as friends, husbands, lovers, fathers.

What began as an association of convenience became the most profound relationship of their lives.

It shaped their political ambitions and their personal attitudes, compelling them further than either had previously dared imagine.

But if their times inspired a revolutionary friendship, they also destroyed it, for the tragic irony was that the more historical circumstance bound them together, the more personal ambitions pulled them apart.

At a momentous turning point in Cuban history, Simon Reid-Henry has crafted a fascinating and original chronicle of two of the most powerful personalities in recent memory.

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£13.99
Product Details
Bloomsbury Publishing
0802715737 / 9780802715739
Paperback
15/01/2011