Kirkus Reviews QR Code
THE YANKEE COMANDANTE by Michael Sallah Kirkus Star

THE YANKEE COMANDANTE

The Untold Story of Courage, Passion, and One American's Fight to Liberate Cuba

by Michael Sallah ; Mitch Weiss

Pub Date: Jan. 6th, 2015
ISBN: 978-0-7627-9287-0
Publisher: Lyons Press

A nonfiction account of an unlikely American hero in revolutionary Cuba that succeeds as both a thriller and a love story.

While working at the Toledo BladeMiami Herald reporter Sallah and AP reporter Weiss shared a Pulitzer Prize (with another of the Blade’s reporters) for a series on Vietnam War atrocities that they expanded into their first book (Tiger Force2006). They also met a remarkable woman living in Toledo, a Cuban émigré and former political prisoner whose story inspired another newspaper series and this book. When she was Olga Maria Rodriguez, she had fallen in love with and married a man who initially didn’t even speak her language, an American named William Morgan who had found purpose in his difficult, directionless life by joining the revolutionary forces in Cuba to overthrow Fulgencio Batista. His experience in the U.S. Army had ended with him going AWOL, but his superior military skills helped him overcome the distrust of his Cuban comrades and earn the admiration of the country’s citizenry, who were “hailing him as a hero of a revolution that was about to change the course of history.” Yet there was tension in the revolutionary forces between Morgan’s Second Front and Fidel Castro’s 26th of July Movement, as the former remained committed to liberating the country and holding elections while the latter was consolidating power and turning the new government into a communist dictatorship. Even greater complications ensued as Morgan was recruited for a plot to assassinate Castro, turned double agent by revealing the plot to the targeted dictator while continuing to play along, and ultimately found himself stripped of his American citizenship and imprisoned by the Cuban government. His widow’s memories help humanize a complicated and conflicted man whose story sheds fresh light on the pivotal period in U.S.-Cuban relations.

Beyond the political implications and entanglements, the story engrosses with its fast-paced, plainspoken narrative.