From Library Journal
Cuban-born Abella's (The Killing of the Saints, LJ 9/1/91) second novel is set amid the drama of the overthrow of Cuban dictator Batista and the rise of Castro. William Morgan, an AWOL marine, comes looking for fun with a Cuban pal but is quickly caught up in the fight to topple Batista. Love also plays a central role, as the idealistic Morgan is driven by his often conflicting loves for Laura and Irma. The novel makes several direct references to Pasternak's Dr. Zhivago, but this novel is not of the same caliber. Abella excels when he incorporates witchcraft scenes, Morgan's awkward use of Spanish, and the complexity of the Castro revolution, especially as these relate to U.S. interests. But while an action novel with a conscience is to be appreciated, Morgan's political-religious soul searching often intrudes. Look for this romantic novel possibly to resurface as a film.?Rebecca Sturm Kelm, Northern Kentucky Univ. Lib., Highland Heights
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
In 1957, big, blond, blue-eyed William Morgan, an AWOL U.S. Marine, is lured to Cuba by a military comrade turned revolutionary. Led more by lust than conscience, Morgan is soon bedding luscious Laura Fernandez and plotting to assassinate President Batista. Meanwhile--in a milieu in which all sides ally themselves based more on strategy than principle--the CIA is tracking Morgan, and Batista's repressive police force is pressuring him for reports of Fernandez family conspiracies. When the assassination attempt fails and Laura is left for dead, Morgan takes to the hills, where he meets Che Guevara, falls in love with American preacher Irma O'Farrell, and joins forces supporting Fidel Castro. A fearless fighter and skilled killer, Morgan becomes a hero of the revolution, betrays the woman of his heart, and follows his conscience when conditions fail to improve under Castro. By a Cuban-born writer, a heartfelt if flawed fictionalized account of his country's travails.
Michele Leber