The Mexican Who Would Be Dickens

Late Literary Lion Carlos Fuentes on L.A., London, and the Book He Wished He Could Have Written

When the Mexican novelist and essayist Carlos Fuentes, who died May 15, visited Zócalo for an interview with Andrés Martinez in the fall of 2007, he talked about place, and places.

Los Angeles, he said, was a “confusing and beautiful” city that left him disoriented, puzzled, and still “very much at home.” He spoke of his life in London, and his appreciation both for its literary history (Dickens was his favorite) and for its “cold” and “miserable” present; the lack of warm people and good food made it an easy place …

Don’t Leave All the PR Work To Colombian Prostitutes

Latin America Has More Good Reasons Than Ever to Be Noticed—And Taken Seriously

“The only thing that matters in the world is China, Russia and Europe. Latin America doesn’t matter. Consciously. People don’t give one damn about Latin America now.” That was the …

A Presidenta is No Panacea, But …

Having a Woman Leader Still Rocks

“No man will hand the presidency to his wife,” my grandmother assured me a year before Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, dressed in bridal white, took the presidential baton from her …

The Philosopher-Fisticuffers

The Rough-and-Tumble World of Latin American Intellectuals in the 20th Century

In 1920, Jose Vasconcelos, the newly appointed rector of Mexico’s national university, started publishing the classics in translation at a feverish pace. He would call it the “first flood of …

It’s a Great Escape–Unless You Can’t Leave

Cuba’s History and the American Imagination

In the American imagination, Cuba is the land of Castro, cars, communism and cane (sugar), a place that offers an escape from the realities of history and the world.

But for …

Cuba Libre?

Four Experts Weigh In on Cuba's Future Ten Years From Now

Cuba has been envisioned by Americans as many things: island paradise, communist stronghold, and Hemingway’s retreat, to name a few. Today, political reforms and a loosening of trade restrictions are …