The Sugar King of Havana by John Paul Rathbone

The rise and fall of sugar trader Julio Lobo becomes a window into pre-revolutionary Cuba, the mechanics of building an economic empire–and the author’s own personal history–in this atmospheric biography by Rathbone, deputy head of the Financial Times’s Lex column and former World Bank economist. Lobo, “Cuba’s richest man and one of the world’s greatest speculators,” is an intriguing subject (“friends nicknamed him El Veneno, the poisonous one, for his charm and sibylline tongue”), and Rathbone handles his volte face, from hobnobbing with Bette Davis to the loss of his fortune and death in exile in Spain, with finesse. Ample drama–multiple divorces, audacious hostile takeovers, assassination attempts–is given gravity by Rathbone’s parallels with and personal connections to his subject: his family traveled in Lobo’s social circle in Cuba during the first half of the 20th century. An exceptionally rich portrait not only of an empire and its progenitor but Cuba itself, and the economic legacy of Castro’s revolution, the loss of capital, and the end of Cuba’s “great age of sugar.”
From Publisher’s Weekly. Copyright © Reed Business Information

About Simon

If you don't know already: I'm an actor who found his way into audiobook narrating as a side-gig and seems to have made a success of it. I did train as an actor as a child (just a couple of hours a week, but it stuck) and later I spent about 15 years working inside the BBC ending up, for a decade, as one of the presenters/newsreaders on BBC Radio 4 in London. I found my way to California a few (!) years ago and have never left.

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