Picture of author.

Che Guevara (1928–1967)

Author of The Motorcycle Diaries

245+ Works 7,578 Members 77 Reviews 5 Favorited

About the Author

Ernesto "Che" Guevara was born in Rosario, Argentina on June 14, 1928, to an aristocratic family of Spanish-Irish descent. He was known from an early age for his dynamic personality and radical points of view. Guevara graduated from the University of Buenos Aires with a degree of doctor of medicine show more and surgery in 1953. He witnessed the 1954 CIA-backed coup in Guatemala that ended the regime of socialist Jacobo Arbenz. As a direct result, Guevara became convinced that the United States would never support leftist governments and that violent revolution was the only way to end poverty in Latin America. He joined Fidel Castro's 26th of July Movement in 1956, and following the Cuban Revolution held several influential posts in the new socialist government, including Minister of Industries. In 1965, Che left Cuba for the ex-Belgian Congo to support the Marxist Simba movement, which was ultimately unsuccessful. Following his time in Africa, Guevara traveled to Bolivia to teach guerrilla warfare to native Communists preparing for revolution. He was captured during a military operation by army forces supported by the United States and executed on October 9, 1967. Guevara's remains were discovered in 1997 and relocated to a mausoleum in Cuba. Guevara had a daughter with Hilda Gadea, whom he married in 1955 and divorced in 1959, and four children with his second wife, Aleida March, a Cuban-born member of the 26th of July movement. He also had a son with Lilia Rosa López. After his death Guevara became a global icon of martyrdom and a symbol of rebellion, particularly during the worldwide student protests of the late 1960s. Among his most noted written works, which include texts on guerilla warfare, socialism, and political economy, are "The Motorcycle Diaries," "Bolivian Diary," and "Reminiscences of the Cuban Revolutionary War." (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: Alberto Korda

Works by Che Guevara

The Motorcycle Diaries (1993) 3,559 copies, 39 reviews
The guerrilla war (1969) 1,026 copies, 13 reviews
The Bolivian Diary (1968) 875 copies, 7 reviews
Reminiscences of the Cuban Revolutionary War (2006) 412 copies, 2 reviews
Episodes of the Cuban Revolutionary War, 1956-58 (1963) — Author — 91 copies
Socialism and Man in Cuba (1968) 65 copies, 1 review
Che Guevara on Global Justice (2002) 64 copies, 2 reviews
Self Portrait Che Guevara (2004) 56 copies, 1 review
Che: The Diaries of Ernesto Che Guevara (2008) 54 copies, 1 review
Latin America Diaries (2000) 27 copies
Les guerilleros (1992) — Diary essay — 24 copies
Escritos revolucionarios (1999) 23 copies
La guerra per bande (2005) 14 copies
Vallankumoussota Kuubassa (1975) 13 copies
Ideario (2007) 10 copies
Socialism and Man (1968) 10 copies
I giovani (1997) 9 copies
Escritos y Discursos (1985) 8 copies
Questa grande umanita (2007) 8 copies
Kubanisches Tagebuch (2008) 7 copies
Justicia Global (2002) 7 copies
Che på svenska : texter (1997) 6 copies
Obras Completas - Ernesto Che Guevara (1995) 6 copies, 1 review
Textos revolucionarios (1997) 6 copies
Scritti scelti (1994) 5 copies
1: L' azione armata (1996) 5 copies
Politica e sviluppo (1993) 5 copies
L' economia (1997) 4 copies
El Libro Verde Olivo (1970) 4 copies
Mein Sohn Che (buch) (1990) 4 copies
Sobre literatura y arte (1997) 3 copies
Obras Completas 3 copies
Selbstportrait (2005) 3 copies
Obras escogidas (1976) 3 copies
Vi skall segra! 2 copies
Educación y Hombre Nuevo 2 copies, 1 review
Diario del Che 2 copies
Poemas al Che (1977) 2 copies
Cubanisches Tagebuch (2003) 2 copies, 1 review
The Diary of Che Guevara (2014) 2 copies
Che. Die Fotobiografie (2000) 2 copies
Apuntes filosóficos (2013) 2 copies
Breviario (2003) 1 copy
Che, escritor (1990) 1 copy
Viagem pela Am℗erica (2004) 1 copy
Oeuvres 1 copy
Guerrilla (1996) 1 copy
Lettere scelte (1997) 1 copy
3 Combates 1 copy
Seleccion de Articulos (1998) 1 copy
CE DITARI 1 copy
Dagbok 1 copy
Diario 1 copy
Diário 1 copy
DISCURSOS 1 copy
Textes politiques (2001) 1 copy
Oeuvres 1 copy
Che y la juventud (1993) 1 copy
Ideario 1 copy

Associated Works

The Outlaw Bible of American Poetry (1999) — Contributor — 601 copies, 3 reviews
The Assassin's Cloak: An Anthology of the World's Greatest Diarists (2000) — Contributor, some editions — 572 copies, 8 reviews
The Motorcycle Diaries [2004 film] (2004) — Original book — 190 copies, 5 reviews
The Mammoth Book of True War Stories (1992) — Contributor — 89 copies
The Penguin Book of Twentieth-Century Protest (1998) — Contributor — 32 copies
Dikt og sak — Contributor — 2 copies

Tagged

20th century (52) Africa (26) anthology (133) Argentina (51) autobiography (136) biography (276) Bolivia (43) Che (76) Che Guevara (206) communism (118) Cuba (236) Cuban Revolution (34) diary (221) DVD (35) guerrilla warfare (60) Guevara (31) history (311) journal (43) Latin America (238) Latin American (29) Marxism (80) memoir (229) military history (37) needs cover (23) non-fiction (400) own (24) poetry (170) politics (271) read (53) revolution (127) socialism (65) South America (152) Spanish (38) to-read (257) travel (188) unread (48) war (67) ↑LoC (38) ♠♠♥♥♦♦• (46) (48)

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

Guevara’s day-by-day chronicle of the 1966–67 guerrilla campaign in Bolivia, an effort to forge a continent-wide revolutionary movement of workers and peasants and open the road to socialist revolution in South America.
 
Flagged
PendleHillLibrary | 6 other reviews | Jul 3, 2024 |
One of the reasons that I enjoy autobiographical books, is that it is virtually impossible to maintain a false character throughout several hundred pages.

Were Mr Guevara to be alive today and, to further stretch credibility, were he to be concerned as to my reading of his character, I would hasten to assure him that he need not so do. This book screams that its writer is a thoroughly decent chap: not a single question on the matter may be considered unanswered.

Enlightening and a read that reenforces one's faith in humankind.… (more)
 
Flagged
the.ken.petersen | 1 other review | Jan 4, 2024 |
Che Guevera's appeal to young people come from his dreamy temperament, revolutionary ideals, impulsive actions, and longing for a better world. This book captures all those things--as it shows a young man embarking on a poorly planned Latin American trip. The best parts recall him interacting with locals. It shows how his encounters with poverty, the ill, and indigenous culture influenced who he'd become. Likewise, the weakest sections show him as an immature dude full of scatological humor, lustful thoughts, and bizarre commentary on people of African descent. Still, it's hard to fault an autobiographical book for documenting the person at the time, and not who they would mature to become.… (more)
 
Flagged
JuntaKinte1968 | 38 other reviews | Dec 6, 2023 |
Scientist, traveller, revolutionary. That’s the portrait of Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara that emerges from a new collection of his letters that uses material long guarded in Cuban archives. I Embrace You with All My Revolutionary Fervor: Letters 1947-1967 begins with Guevara as a 19-year-old in his native Argentina, spans his ventures across Latin America and in Congo, and ends months before his death in Bolivia. Guevara is a fine letter-writer and this collection highlights the maturity of his young mind. A research medic and a stringent social critic, he is a lively wit who describes himself as a ‘little wandering prophet who, in a loud voice, goes around announcing the coming of the final judgment day’.

The wandering prophet’s communist commitment gestated in his young adulthood, as he saw Latin America’s vast inequalities at close quarters during his motorcycle trip through South America in 1952 and his travels across Central America from 1953 to 1956. In Costa Rica, having witnessed the treatment of local workers by the US multinational company United Fruit, Guevara writes to his aunt: ‘I swore before a picture of the old and lately lamented compañero, Stalin, not to rest until I see these capitalist octopuses annihilated.’

Along with the strength of his ideology, the letters underscore his devotion to science. Guevara appears to have been close to the cutting edge of allergy medicine in Latin America. ‘I am certain’, he wrote in 1954, ‘that if I reach my truly creative phase at about 35, my exclusive, or at least main, concern will be nuclear physics, or genetics, or some other field that brings together the most interesting aspects of knowledge.’

Read the rest of the review at a href="https://www.historytoday.com/archive/review/i-embrace-you-all-my-revolutionary-fervor-letters-1947-1967-che-guevara-review">HistoryToday.com.

Daniel Rey is a writer and critic based in New York.
… (more)
 
Flagged
HistoryToday | Aug 31, 2023 |

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Ann Wright Translator
Joseph Hansen Foreword
Iván Pérez Editorial coordinator
Miguel de Unamuno Contributor
Jesús Muñiz Translation coordinator
A. Reynaldo Translator
Rosa María Marrero Editorial commission member
Niurka Escalante Editorial commission member
José Antonio Fernández Editorial coordinator
Aníbal Yáñez Translator
Ester Raro Translator
Mike Taber Translator
Orlando López Translator
Marla Hoffman Translator
Reynaldo Alés Translation coordinator
J. Muniz Translator
Lourdes González Editorial commission member
Jan Calloway Translator
Osvaldo Salas Photographer
Alexandra Keeble Translator, Editor
Cintio Vitier Introduction
I. F. Stone Translator
Adele Spallino Translator
Jan Donkers Translator
Michael Taber Translator
Fidel Castro Introduction
Jon Lee Anderson Introduction
Carlos P. Hansen Translator
Andrew Sinclair Translator
ekeflogudrun Translator
Victoria Ortiz Translator
Robert Merle Translator, Preface
Eduardo Bernat Translator
merlemagali Translator
Barbara Klau Translator
Manuel Talens Translator
Sue Ashdown Translator

Statistics

Works
245
Also by
8
Members
7,578
Popularity
#3,222
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
77
ISBNs
487
Languages
25
Favorited
5

Charts & Graphs