Welcome to Miami (Paperback)

Author: Michael Largo
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Format: Paperback
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Product Summary
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780966617344
Publisher: Tropical Press Inc
Publish Date: 5/1/2000
Buy.com Sku: 30617500
Item#: RMQ7K7
Pages: 250
 
From the Publisher
Miami has been called America's tropical playground, Gateway to the Americas, and heralded as a glimpse into how the nation's metropolitan areas will be in the future. It's a unique city promising a dynamic blend of cultures. It is also the preferred destination of exiles and refugees seeking the American Dream. "Welcome to Miami" is a story narrated by Max, a native Floridian born in the Everglades telling of his time with one headline grabbing Cuban infiltrator, Emilio Garcia Abierto, an exile who first arrived with 125,000 other refugees during the Mariel exodus. Although "Welcome to Miami" could not get the Miami Tourist Board's endorsement, it is an entertaining and insightful tale of Cubans, Miami, life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness in the sun.

Publishers Weekly
Emilio Garcia Abierto is the Billy Pilgrim, the na ve innocent, at the heart of this mostly comic tale of a Mariel refugee who believes for two decades that he has been sent to America to operate as a James Bond-style super-spy for Fidel Castro. That's the joke that runs the length and depth of Largo's novel--though even more amusing is the possibility that Abierto (literal translation: open) might be correct. The narrative is told frame style, with Abierto's good friend Max, a Florida native, pitching Abierto's story to a movie "scout." Max is one of the regulars who hang out at Pecker's Bait & Tackle, and he trucks out refugees from downtown Miami to work for wealthy old man Manuel, one of the original landowners to flee Cuba when Castro came to power. Subplots include Tom Pecker's plan to "discover" a bigfoot in the Everglades, and Ma Pecker's resurgent sexuality. Largo nails the grudging and grungy treatment accorded the Marielitos by every ethnic slice of the Miami pie, and he lampoons American plenty, which plays a big role in events. Even Fidel, heavily veiled in cartoon disguises, makes an appearance at the ragged edge of the Everglades for the sake of lust and Cocoa Puffs. Throughout, Abierto never loses his movie-fueled belief in the glamour of being a spy, or his faith in Castro-style communism. The sincere, humorless Abierto's 20-year initiation into the American dream is a thin thread to hang a plot on, however. Since Largo can't resist the contrast between Florida's color-saturated atmosphere and its Darwinian realities, his tone veers from slapstick to serious and back again, and the novel fails to gain solid ground.
 
  



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