Bananas: How The United Fruit Company Shaped The World follows from inauspicious birth to heyday a corporation so powerful it orchestrated coups against unfriendly governments. It invented Seniorita Chiquita Banana. The book overreaches in saying it's a "United Fruit World", though UF had huge impact in the early 20th Century, introducing the banana to the world, standardizing bananas, and transforming huge swaths of Central American jungle to plantations via its "banana boats", railroads, ports and company towns. The term "Banana Republic" specifically refers to the tiny, corrupt Central American nations on the UF payroll.
This book has an understandably strong anti-UF tilt, but the author makes attempts at even-handedness, allowing for the corporation's technological advances, the fact it was the largest employer in Central America because it paid better than the workers could earn elsewhere, and it did some charitable works, especially in locating and restoring Mayan ruins. Some of its company towns still exist and it brought electricity and communications.
Though bananas are cheap and plentiful today, the United States and Europe had hardly seen the exotic fruit, which rots quickly, before the unlikely pairing of small-time but audacious businessmen, expat Minor Keith and a New Orleans banana trader, the Russian-born Jew Samuel Zemurray. Tiny Costa Rica, with barely 100,000 residents, wanted a railroad and after several failed attempts, President Guardia approached the trader Minor Keith about government money in exchange for a completed railroad from the capital to the sea. Keith agreed with the caveat that, like US land grant railroads, he be given jungle lands along the tracks. The railroad was built and after a few tries at different uses, Keith settled upon banana production in the adjacent lands. He also married President Guardia's daughter, cementing a United Fruit-Costa Rican alliance that would last for decades.
Bananas grew wild in small numbers in malarial jungle swamps. United Fruit settled on a specific breed of banana (the "Big Mike"), grew fantastic quantities through modern agriculture, and revolutionized distribution with faster boats and refrigerated rail-cars. Ever larger plantations were developed and workers were shipped in from Jamaica, Italy and even China. The banana caught the fancy of the burgeoning American consumer and today, the banana is the world's fourth most popular staple.
That said, by no means is this a banal "corporate history". The tone is highly critical. The UF tolerated no dissent and stifled unionization attempts. The company successfully dodged taxes and worked sweetheart deals by taking advantage of the Latin American tradition of the "mordida", the bribe to a public official. At its most nefarious, a democratically-elected government like Guatemala's in 1954, which was confiscating some UFW land, could be brought down by funding and supplying rebels or even arming company employees. At Santa Marta, the UF leaned on the Colombian government to break a strike, which its Army did via the machine gun. Author Peter Chapman notes this incident is the inspiration for the fictionalized account in the Maconda of Gabriel Garcia Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude.
This book is brief at 208 pages, which makes it a quick read, though it leaves information out. I'd have appreciated more. Chapman mentions death squads but has no details, leaving the reader to surmise UF probably encouraged, if not directly ordered, some of the military dictatorships' vile deeds. I understand some artifacts of the population and cultural transfers (e.g. American baseball, Afro-Caribbean music) were left in UF's wake, although this book's brevity means these were omitted. The focus is on the Central American Banana Republics and Cuba with UF operations in the rest of the Caribbean, Colombia and Ecuador receiving only passing mention. UF was one of Castro's revolutionary justifications and it responded by supplying two of the seven ships used in the ill-fated Bay of Pigs invasion.
The author writes in a sarcastic, almost whimsical way. Sometimes this is quite funny. At times, it's inappropriate. I had to read pg. 159-160 twice because Chapman speculates UF might have been involved in JFK's assassination, going into a paragraph of hypothetical reasons why and a few coincidences that'd make any Grassy Knoll conspiracy theorist proud. I assume it is a tongue-in-cheek joke, but it's irresponsible because these Dallas conspiracy musings were printed in a history book.
I enjoyed the read, even if Chapman goes overboard at times. 3.5 stars.