ReviewsHaiti's history is tragic and noble, worth knowing for its own sake and essential to the country's future. This book is an admirable synthesis of that history--sensible, comprehensive, and gracefully written., Laurent Dubois is an impeccable scholar and a master storyteller. Haiti: The Aftershocks of History is the new standard work in English on the astounding panorama of Haitian history, from the seismic events of its founding to the earthquake of 2010., A book as welcome as it is timely: a lucid one-volume history of the nation, from Toussaint to the present, anchored in scholarship but rendered as a comprehensive-but-swift narrative for the general reader., Well-written, authoritative history... enriched by careful attention to what Haitian intellectuals have had to say about their country over the last two centuries., "Engrossing and deeply researched_ An admirable chronicle that dispels many of the myths that swirl around Haiti and frustrate an honest assessment of the country and its people."- The Miami Herald "[An] excellent, engaging history."- The New Yorker "A book as welcome as it is timely: a lucid one-volume history of the nation, from Toussaint to the present, anchored in scholarship but rendered as a comprehensive-but-swift narrative for the general reader."- The Nation, Very few times have I been able to say that I learned something new about a subject with which I am ostensibly familiar. But this is the case on virtually every page of Laurent Dubois's Haiti: The Aftershocks of History . Dubois, the veritable dean of Haitian studies, has produced that rarest of things: a highly entertaining narrative for the general reader, but one deeply satisfying to the scholar as well. This brilliant book, a compelling and colorful saga of the triumph and tragedy of Haitian revolution and freedom, should be required reading for anyone who wonders from whence the 'curse on Haiti' really emanated., An admirable chronicle... Reading Haiti: The Aftershocks of History , I was repeatedly struck by the deep and detailed explanations of things that had never quite made sense to me about Haiti. Those 'aha' moments were some of the most satisfying passages in this engrossing and deeply-researched book., This excellent, engaging history seeks to strip away centuries of mocking and reductive bias. Dubois's Haiti is a land of ceaseless activity, a ferment of suppression and insurrection exacerbated by the mercenary intrusions of foreign powers--in the past century, chiefly the United States. Dubois also traces a parallel history of bold social experiments on the part of everyday Haitians... Throughout, he makes clear how economic pressures and political crises have left even the county's better leaders hamstrung, without downplaying their failures in fulfilling Haiti's great promise., Featured by The New York Times as one of the "100 Notable Books of 2012" "Well-written, authoritative history… enriched by careful attention to what Haitian intellectuals have had to say about their country over the last two centuries." - The New York Times Book Review "A sweeping, passionate history of Haiti... Smart, honest, and utterly compelling, this book is the national biography this country and its people deserve." - Boston Globe "A book as welcome as it is timely: a lucid one-volume history of the nation, from Toussaint to the present, anchored in scholarship but rendered as a comprehensive-but-swift narrative for the general reader." - The Nation "This excellent, engaging history seeks to strip away centuries of mocking and reductive bias. Dubois's Haiti is a land of ceaseless activity, a ferment of suppression and insurrection exacerbated by the mercenary intrusions of foreign powers-in the past century, chiefly the United States. Dubois also traces a parallel history of bold social experiments on the part of everyday Haitians… Throughout, he makes clear how economic pressures and political crises have left even the county's better leaders hamstrung, without downplaying their failures in fulfilling Haiti's great promise." - The New Yorker "An admirable chronicle… Reading Haiti: The Aftershocks of History , I was repeatedly struck by the deep and detailed explanations of things that had never quite made sense to me about Haiti. Those 'aha' moments were some of the most satisfying passages in this engrossing and deeply-researched book." - The Miami Herald "A vigorous, knowledgeable and empathetic account... A pleasure to add to my collection of writings about Haiti." - San Francisco Chronicle "Fascinating… For anyone with even a little interest in Haiti, this book is an essential read." - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette "Very few times have I been able to say that I learned something new about a subject with which I am ostensibly familiar. But this is the case on virtually every page of Laurent Dubois's Haiti: The Aftershocks of History . Dubois, the veritable dean of Haitian studies, has produced that rarest of things: a highly entertaining narrative for the general reader, but one deeply satisfying to the scholar as well. This brilliant book, a compelling and colorful saga of the triumph and tragedy of Haitian revolution and freedom, should be required reading for anyone who wonders from whence the 'curse on Haiti' really emanated." - Henry Louis Gates Jr. , The Alphonse Fletcher University Professor, Harvard University "Laurent Dubois is an impeccable scholar and a master storyteller. Haiti: The Aftershocks of History is the new standard work in English on the astounding panorama of Haitian history, from the seismic events of its founding to the earthquake of 2010." - Madison Smartt Bell , author of All Souls' Rising "Haiti's history is tragic and noble, worth knowing for its own sake and essential to the country's future. This book is an admirable synthesis of that history-sensible, comprehensive, and gracefully written." - Tracy Kidder , author of Mountains Beyond Mountains "A masterpiece… For those who, perusing the headlines, sometimes find themselves moved to ask the perennial question 'Why is Haiti like that?,' Laurent Dubois provides a brilliant and perceptive riposte. Wielding sharp, unsettling anecdotes and a flowing prose style, Dubois plumbs Haiti's rich and singular history-with its unlikely heroes and persuasive demons, its exploiters and its misérables , its compromisers and its intransigents-to teach us important and subtle lessons in revolution, occupation, and liberation. These lessons go well beyond the concerns of Haitianists to encompass the great surge of human history, which may well be bearing us, today, toward another similar age of revolution and upheaval." - Amy Wilentz , author of The Rainy Season, "Well-written, authoritative history... enriched by careful attention to what Haitian intellectuals have had to say about their country over the last two centuries." -- The New York Times Book Review "A sweeping, passionate history of Haiti... Smart, honest, and utterly compelling, this book is the national biography this country and its people deserve." -- Boston Globe "A book as welcome as it is timely: a lucid one-volume history of the nation, from Toussaint to the present, anchored in scholarship but rendered as a comprehensive-but-swift narrative for the general reader." -- The Nation "This excellent, engaging history seeks to strip away centuries of mocking and reductive bias. Dubois''s Haiti is a land of ceaseless activity, a ferment of suppression and insurrection exacerbated by the mercenary intrusions of foreign powers--in the past century, chiefly the United States. Dubois also traces a parallel history of bold social experiments on the part of everyday Haitians... Throughout, he makes clear how economic pressures and political crises have left even the county''s better leaders hamstrung, without downplaying their failures in fulfilling Haiti''s great promise." -- The New Yorker "An admirable chronicle... Reading Haiti: The Aftershocks of History , I was repeatedly struck by the deep and detailed explanations of things that had never quite made sense to me about Haiti. Those ''aha'' moments were some of the most satisfying passages in this engrossing and deeply-researched book." -- The Miami Herald "A vigorous, knowledgeable and empathetic account... A pleasure to add to my collection of writings about Haiti." -- San Francisco Chronicle "Fascinating... For anyone with even a little interest in Haiti, this book is an essential read." -- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette "Very few times have I been able to say that I learned something new about a subject with which I am ostensibly familiar. But this is the case on virtually every page of Laurent Dubois''s Haiti: The Aftershocks of History . Dubois, the veritable dean of Haitian studies, has produced that rarest of things: a highly entertaining narrative for the general reader, but one deeply satisfying to the scholar as well. This brilliant book, a compelling and colorful saga of the triumph and tragedy of Haitian revolution and freedom, should be required reading for anyone who wonders from whence the ''curse on Haiti'' really emanated." -- Henry Louis Gates Jr., The Alphonse Fletcher University Professor, Harvard University "Laurent Dubois is an impeccable scholar and a master storyteller. Haiti: The Aftershocks of History is the new standard work in English on the astounding panorama of Haitian history, from the seismic events of its founding to the earthquake of 2010." -- Madison Smartt Bell, author of All Souls'' Rising "Haiti''s history is tragic and noble, worth knowing for its own sake and essential to the country''s future. This book is an admirable synthesis of that history--sensible, comprehensive, and gracefully written." --Tracy Kidder, author of Mountains Beyond Mountains "A masterpiece... For those who, perusing the headlines, sometimes find themselves moved to ask the perennial question ''Why is Haiti like that?,'' Laurent Dubois provides a brilliant and perceptive riposte. Wielding sharp, unsettling anecdotes and a flowing prose style, Dubois plumbs Haiti''s rich and singular history--with its unlikely heroes and persuasive demons, its exploiters and its misérables , its compromisers and its intransigents--to teach us important and subtle lessons in revolution, occupation, and liberation. These lessons go well beyond the concerns of Haitianists to encompass the great surge of human history, which may well be bearing us, today, toward another similar age of revolution and upheaval." -- Amy Wilentz, author of The Rainy Season, A vigorous, knowledgeable and empathetic account... A pleasure to add to my collection of writings about Haiti., A masterpiece... For those who, perusing the headlines, sometimes find themselves moved to ask the perennial question 'Why is Haiti like that?,' Laurent Dubois provides a brilliant and perceptive riposte. Wielding sharp, unsettling anecdotes and a flowing prose style, Dubois plumbs Haiti's rich and singular history--with its unlikely heroes and persuasive demons, its exploiters and its misérables , its compromisers and its intransigents--to teach us important and subtle lessons in revolution, occupation, and liberation. These lessons go well beyond the concerns of Haitianists to encompass the great surge of human history, which may well be bearing us, today, toward another similar age of revolution and upheaval., "An authoritative history...Feels chillingly up to date."---Adam Hochschild, The New York Times Book Review "A sweeping, passionate history…Smart, honest, and utterly compelling, this book is the national biography this country and its people deserve."--- The Boston Globe "Engrossing and deeply researched…An admirable chronicle that dispels many of the myths that swirl around Haiti and frustrate an honest assessment of the country and its people."--- The Miami Herald "[An] excellent, engaging history…Dubois's Haiti is a land of ceaseless activity, a ferment of suppression and insurrection exacerbated by the mercenary intrusions of foreign powers."--- The New Yorker "A book as welcome as it is timely: a lucid one-volume history of the nation, from Toussaint to the present, anchored in scholarship but rendered as a comprehensive-but-swift narrative for the general reader."--- The Nation "Opens up a new view of Haiti… Essential."--- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, "Engrossing and deeply researched... An admirable chronicle that dispels many of the myths that swirl around Haiti and frustrate an honest assessment of the country and its people."- The Miami Herald "[An] excellent, engaging history."- The New Yorker "A book as welcome as it is timely: a lucid one-volume history of the nation, from Toussaint to the present, anchored in scholarship but rendered as a comprehensive-but-swift narrative for the general reader."- The Nation, A sweeping, passionate history of Haiti... Smart, honest, and utterly compelling, this book is the national biography this country and its people deserve., "Well-written, authoritative history... enriched by careful attention to what Haitian intellectuals have had to say about their country over the last two centuries." -- The New York Times Book Review "A sweeping, passionate history of Haiti... Smart, honest, and utterly compelling, this book is the national biography this country and its people deserve." -- Boston Globe "A book as welcome as it is timely: a lucid one-volume history of the nation, from Toussaint to the present, anchored in scholarship but rendered as a comprehensive-but-swift narrative for the general reader." -- The Nation "This excellent, engaging history seeks to strip away centuries of mocking and reductive bias. Dubois''s Haiti is a land of ceaseless activity, a ferment of suppression and insurrection exacerbated by the mercenary intrusions of foreign powers--in the past century, chiefly the United States. Dubois also traces a parallel history of bold social experiments on the part of everyday Haitians... Throughout, he makes clear how economic pressures and political crises have left even the county''s better leaders hamstrung, without downplaying their failures in fulfilling Haiti''s great promise." -- The New Yorker "An admirable chronicle... Reading Haiti: The Aftershocks of History , I was repeatedly struck by the deep and detailed explanations of things that had never quite made sense to me about Haiti. Those ''aha'' moments were some of the most satisfying passages in this engrossing and deeply-researched book." -- The Miami Herald "A vigorous, knowledgeable and empathetic account... A pleasure to add to my collection of writings about Haiti." -- San Francisco Chronicle "Fascinating... For anyone with even a little interest in Haiti, this book is an essential read." -- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette "Very few times have I been able to say that I learned something new about a subject with which I am ostensibly familiar. But this is the case on virtually every page of Laurent Dubois''s Haiti: The Aftershocks of History . Dubois, the veritable dean of Haitian studies, has produced that rarest of things: a highly entertaining narrative for the general reader, but one deeply satisfying to the scholar as well. This brilliant book, a compelling and colorful saga of the triumph and tragedy of Haitian revolution and freedom, should be required reading for anyone who wonders from whence the ''curse on Haiti'' really emanated." -- Henry Louis Gates Jr., The Alphonse Fletcher University Professor, Harvard University "Laurent Dubois is an impeccable scholar and a master storyteller. Haiti: The Aftershocks of History is the new standard work in English on the astounding panorama of Haitian history, from the seismic events of its founding to the earthquake of 2010." -- Madison Smartt Bell, author of All Souls'' Rising "Haiti''s history is tragic and noble, worth knowing for its own sake and essential to the country''s future. This book is an admirable synthesis of that history--sensible, comprehensive, and gracefully written." --Tracy Kidder, author of Mountains Beyond Mountains "A masterpiece... For those who, perusing the headlines, sometimes find themselves moved to ask the perennial question ''Why is Haiti like that?,'' Laurent Dubois provides a brilliant and perceptive riposte. Wielding sharp, unsettling anecdotes and a flowing prose style, Dubois plumbs Haiti''s rich and singular history--with its unlikely heroes and persuasive demons, its exploiters and its misrables , its compromisers and its intransigents--to teach us important and subtle lessons in revolution, occupation, and liberation. These lessons go well beyond the concerns of Haitianists to encompass the great surge of human history, which may well be bearing us, today, toward another similar age of revolution and upheaval." -- Amy Wilentz, author of The Rainy Season
Dewey Decimal972.94