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Chile - Politics & Government, Generals & Military Leaders - Biography, Dictators & Fascists - Political Biography, Chile - History
Pinochet and Me by Marc Cooper β€” book cover

Pinochet and Me

by Marc Cooper
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Overview

In writing from Chile Marc Cooper vividly evokes the tense atmosphere of the final days of the Allende government. When he revisits years later, he finds a sham of democracy but also spasms of protest in the wake of Pinochet's arrest that may at last shake Chile's status quo. This book brings to life the compelling human history buried under three decades of official distortions in some of the darkest chapters of US Cold War policy.

Synopsis

In writing from Chile Marc Cooper vividly evokes the tense atmosphere of the final days of the Allende government. When he revisits years later, he finds a sham of democracy but also spasms of protest in the wake of Pinochet's arrest that may at last shake Chile's status quo. This book brings to life the compelling human history buried under three decades of official distortions in some of the darkest chapters of US Cold War policy.

Author Biography: Marc Cooper was a translator for President Salvador Allende at the time of the Chilean coup in 1973. His journalism has appeared in publications that include the New Yorker, Harper's and Rolling Stone. He is currently a contributing editor to The Nation magazine as well as the host of the nationally syndicated Radio Nation. He is the author of Roll Over Che Guevara: Travels of a Radical Reporter.

Warren Beatty

[V]ividly and masterfully evokes some of the darkest chapters of US Cold War policy.

About the Author, Marc Cooper

Marc Cooper's journalism has appeared in publications that include the New Yorker, Harper's and Rolling Stone. He is currently a contributing editor of the Nation magazine. He is the author of Roll Over Che Guevara: Travels of a Radical Reporter.

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Editorials

Village Voice

[S]truggles to breathe remembrance into a decades-long nightmare of civilian death, imprisonment and exile.

Times Literary Supplement

In spite of his critical perspective of Chile, it is a country he clearly loves. This is a fine and lucid book.

Warren Beatty

[V]ividly and masterfully evokes some of the darkest chapters of US Cold War policy.

Publishers Weekly

In this brief yet expertly crafted remembrance, veteran American journalist and Nation contributing editor Cooper traces the fate of Chile from the overthrow in 1973 of its democratically elected Marxist president, Salvador Allende, to today. Cooper is no impartial observer. As a young man he was Allende's translator and shared his radical visions. (He also married into a Chilean family.) But it is the underlying sadness of crushed hopes and demolished dreams, conveyed in the crisp prose of a skilled observer, that makes this tale so compelling. Cooper takes the reader through the last desperate days of Allende's rule and the "dizzying dance of chaos and blood" of his overthrow. He reports on the dreary and dangerous nature of life in Chile in the 1970s and 1980s under the dictator Gen. Augusto Pinochet. On returning to Chile in the 1990s, Cooper finds that while democracy has been restored, the political soul of the nation has been lost to a cynical individualism and mindless consumerism, stirred only by the arrest of Pinochet in England for the human rights violations of his regime. He finds in Chile an unwillingness to confront the past and remarks that without doing so the country can never really leave that past behind. In the end, this is a eulogy for the lost utopian longings of Chile, of Cooper himself and of so many of his generation. He writes, "Chile was not the prelude to my generation's accomplishments [but] our political high water mark." Cooper offers engaged reporting at its best. (Jan.) Forecast: Cooper's pro-Allende stance will mark this as a book for readers whose hearts remain on the left; the author's readers at the Nation, for instance, will find this account simpatico. Recent headlines regarding Pinochet will help as well. Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

Cooper calls this an "anti-memoir" because, he says, a memoir attempts to reassemble parts of a "forgotten or fading past," but in Chile the past has been "erased as if the internal magnets of historical retention...ha[ve] been given a massive jolt of electro-shock." Cooper (Roll Over Che Guevara: Travels of a Radical Reporter), a contributing editor to The Nation, was a translator for Salvador Allende until the Socialist democracy of Chile was overthrown by General Pinochet's coup in 1973. The author details his experiences and emotions during the days leading up to and immediately after the coup. He writes with dismay of the repression and economic inequity he has found on occasional visits back to Chile and laments the apparent refusal of the Chilean people to acknowledge the freedom and promise that the Allende government offered. Current conditions in Chile allow for historical examination of the Allende period and the brutality of the Pinochet era, and Cooper has written this "anti-memoir" to assist with both processes. Recommended for libraries with significant Latin American Studies collections.--Jill Ortner, SUNY at Buffalo Libs. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
March 1, 2002
Publisher
Norton Client/Verso
Pages
158
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781859843604

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