Wednesday, April 13, 2016

A St. Paul neighborhood paper did a feature on my Crosshairs novel this week. It might not be the NYT, but it's still publicity. 

“Historical thriller helps readers understand what happened between the U.S. and Cuba five decades ago.”




Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Got the first review on Amazon today of my historical thriller Crosshairs on Castro. Five star review.
"Perfect story with the current opening of Cuba. A great story I couldn't stop reading, with the intrigue of the White House and frequent glimpses of the internal workings of Fidel"s web of deceit. I recommend it!"

Click here to check it out at Amazon. Only $4.50 for the e-reader version.
http://www.amazon.com/Crosshairs-Castro-John-J-Harrigan/dp/1522848169/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1456521076&sr=8-1&keywords=Crosshairs+on+Castro

Thursday, March 24, 2016

At my Great Decisions Cuba Presentation Yesterday, this WWII vet let me take a photo of him holding a memento of his 1944 visit to Sloppy Joe's, a legendary bar in Havana from the 1920s until it was destroyed by a fire in the 1960s. Below are the vet, his photo and contrasting shots of Sloppy Joe's in the 1920s and during its reconstruction in ca 2007. It was reopened in 2013.


 


Monday, March 21, 2016

Historic Visit

Excitement in Cuba
Obama just arrived. Some like it and some don't. In either case, its historic.


Thursday, March 10, 2016

I made a Great Decisions Cuba-U.S. Relations presentation talk the other night, and we had a fascinating exchange of opinions up at the end.

Could the progress we've made in opening up relations between our two countries be reversed?

My response was, "No."  The genie's out of the bottle and it will be impossible to stuff him back into the bottle.

Some other people argued strongly, however, that some of the Republican candidates would reverse the progress if they were to get elected.

As expected, we didn't come to any agreement on this.

Saturday, February 13, 2016

Travel to Cuba About to Get Easier

Cuba and the U.S. will sign an agreement Tuesday to open up commercial flights to the island. Until now, you had to sign up with an expensive charter flight and follow a restricted itinerary. The competition from commercial flights will probably bring down the cost of the charters. It will also make on-line booking possible. These two steps will make it both easier and cheaper for you to get there. Whether itinerary restrictions have been lifted isn't clear yet.

I'll keep you posted as more info comes to light. If you have more up-to-date information, please leave a comment. Many viewers will appreciate it.

 

Tuesday, February 9, 2016

If I ever get to Havana, one of the sights I want to see is Esquina Caliente. You find it in the Central Park where young men gather all day to argue about baseball. Hence the name. Esquina Caliente means "Hot Corner." Take a look, and feel free to comment.

Saturday, February 6, 2016












One last comment on Copellia.

Copellia has become such an icon in Havana that I couldn’t resist using it for one of the scenes in my new novel Crosshairs on Castro that’s coming out in a few weeks. Then I got nagged by a suspicion that Copellia might not have existed in 1962 which is when the novel is set. Sure enough, when I looked into it, Copellia didn’t open until 1966. That’s one of the perils of writing historical fiction.

I kept the scene, but shifted it from Copellia to even better  Havana establishment, the restaurant El Floridita.  

Friday, February 5, 2016

Last week, I noted that the popular ice cream store Coppelia illustrates a problem posed by  Cuba’s dual currency system. 

Coppelia illustrates another problem as well. It offers fewer flavors than it used to offer. And, as the photo shows, the lines can be long, especially for people buying with nonconvertible pesos. The line looks jagged, because Coppelia has a different way of doing this than we have in the U.S. When you show up, you shout “Ultima!” or “Last!” The last person in line raises his or her hand, letting you know who you follow. While you are waiting for that person to reach the window, you can wander around, go to the restroom, or just sit around waiting. But you don’t have to stand in line. When the other guy shows up at the window, you just fall in behind him.

Given the opening of relations with Cuba, it is likely that foreign ice cream chains will want into the Cuban market. How will Coppelia survive if it has to compete with well-run companies like Ben and Jerry or Dairy Queen? Customers at a well-run Ben and Jerry Ice Cream Shop probably won't put up with the long lines at Coppelia.


This problem will expand beyond Copelia. As Cuba engages more fully with the world, the government will lose its ability to protect its state-run industries from competition, Huge swaths of the economy will come under pressure.

Friday, January 22, 2016

I would never want to be governed by Fidel Castro. But he should get credit where credit is due.  

Measure                       Cuba today     U.S.                 Latin America countries
with a better reading
Life Expectancy          77.7                 78.4                 Costa Rica                  
Infant Mortality          4.6                   5.8                   None
Adult Literacy            96.6%             92.6%              Costa Rica; Mexico
,


Sources:  UNESCO for Literacy; World Fact Book for the others. These results can differ by the organization compiling the data. But the differences are small. In general, by these measures, Cuba compares favorably with the U.S. and much better than the bulk of Latin America.

Feel free to comment. Just click the comment box and type your entry. Then click publish.

Thursday, January 21, 2016

Did my Great Decisions Cuba-U.S. Presentation at St. Paul's Central H.S. this week. Had a small, but enthusiastic audience.

Monday, January 18, 2016



Coppelia is Havana’s popular ice cream parlor. It was started by in 1966, and served 26 flavors of ice cream in honor of Fidel’s 26th of July Revolutionary Movement.

Today, there are fewer flavors, and Coppelia illustrates two dilemmas facing Cuba. The first is what to do with its confusing dual currency system. Most shops in Cuba accept only the national currency, but so-called “dollar stores” accept the convertible peso that was created in the 1990s and pegged to the dollar. This was done in part to stimulate a tourist industry that would make up for the economic chaos that struck after the USSR collapsed and could no longer subsidize Cuba. The exchange ratio is about 25 national pesos for one convertible peso.

Coppelia accepts both the national peso and the convertible peso. But paying in convertible pesos gets you more flavors and shorter lines than paying in the national peso.

The currency discrepancies at Coppelia could be eliminated by scrapping the dual currency system and moving to a single currency. But the Economist magazine pointed out a dilemma in doing that. If the national peso were replaced by the convertible peso, the likely result would be rampant inflation. On the other hand, if the convertible peso were replaced by the national peso, it would devalue the savings of people who had built up a nest egg in convertible pesos. Either way, Cubans suffer.



I wanted to set a scene for my CROSSHAIRS ON CASTRO at Coppelia. But, alas, my novel is set in 1962 and Coppelia wasn’t built until four years later.

Feel free to leave a comment. 


Sunday, January 17, 2016

On Tuesday, I do my Great Decisions Cuba-U.S. presentation at Central H.S. in St. Paul. I haven't talked to a high school audience in years.  Decades, in fact.
Wish me luck!
Here's a link to the Great Decisions program, if you're curious.
http://www.fpa.org/news/index.cfm?act=show_announcement&announcement_id=393

Thursday, January 14, 2016

A New Wave of Migrants from Cuba?
Since 1966, any Cuban landing on U.S. shores gets immediate entry. There is a fear that this arrangement may soon disappear as a result of President Obama's opening relations with Cuba. As a consequence thousands of Cubans have fled to Ecuador and Central America in hopes of gaining transit from there to the U.S. In December, none other than Pope Francis called for an alleviation of the stranding of thousands inBalloons fly away as Pope Francis celebrates the Angelus prayer from his window overlooking St. Peter's Square at the Vatican, Sunday, Dec. 27, 2015. Central America.

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Travelling to Cuba?
It's been made a lot easier in the past few months, but it's still not like driving across the border at Niagara Falls to drive around Canada at your leisure.
Here's a couple of sites to help you sort it out.

NYT  http://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/21/travel/cuba-vacations.html?_r=0

CNN  http://www.cnn.com/2015/12/18/travel/cuba-travel-rules-explained/

Monday, January 11, 2016

Meyer Lansky's grandson, Gary Rapaport, may seek compensation for property that Lansky lost when he was forced out of Cuba by Fidel Castro in 1959. Gary should read CROSSHAIRS ON CASTRO to find out where Lansky stashed his jewels before he fled. https://www.casino.org/news/meyer-lansky-heirs-seek-compensation-claim-for-cuban-casino

Sunday, January 10, 2016

I'm just getting started on this blog. It is a companion to my soon to be launched novel CROSSHAIRS ON CASTRO. There's been an explosion of interest in and hopes for Cuba in the past few years. We'll try to track some of these. But this blog is a work in progress, so stay tuned.