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Empire's Crossroads: The Caribbean From Columbus to the Present Day

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In October 1492, an Italian-born, Spanish-funded navigator discovered a new world, thousands of miles across the Atlantic Ocean. In Empire's Crossroads, Carrie Gibson, unfolds the story of the Caribbean from Columbus's first landing on the island he named San Salvador to today's islands - largely independent, but often still in thrall to Europe and America's insatiable desire for tropical luxuries. From the early years of settlement to the age of sugar and slavery, during which vast riches were generated for Europeans through the enforced labour of millions of enslaved Africans, to the great slave rebellions of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and the long, slow progress towards independence in the modern era, Gibson offers a vivid, panoramic view of this complex and contradictory region. From Cuba to Haiti, from Jamaica to Trinidad, the story of the Caribbean is not simply the story of slaves and masters - but of fortune-seekers, tourists, scientists and pirates. It is not only a story of imperial expansion - European and American - but also of life as it is lived in the islands, both in the past and today.

691 pages, Kindle Edition

First published June 19, 2014

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About the author

Carrie Gibson

4 books58 followers
Carrie Gibson is the author of three works of history: The Great Resistance: The 400-Year Fight to End Slavery in the Americas (2026), El Norte: The Epic and Forgotten Story of Hispanic North America (2019), and Empire’s Crossroads: A history of the Caribbean from Columbus to the Present Day (2014). Prior to gaining a PhD in history at the University of Cambridge in 2011, she worked as journalist for The Guardian and Observer in London. She is currently living in Seoul, South Korea.

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5 stars
139 (23%)
4 stars
252 (42%)
3 stars
167 (28%)
2 stars
30 (5%)
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6 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 74 reviews
Profile Image for Práxedes Rivera.
468 reviews13 followers
May 9, 2019
This book was, in a word, disappointing. It bills itself as a 'new' history of the Caribbean yet it employs the same Eurocentric lens to recount the story of this beleaguered land. I suppose I was hoping for more input from the locals (Creoles, Mestizos, Amerindians, etc.) that make up the West Indies to support the 'new' claim.

The book is very well supported by research until Chapter 12. Then the number of citations drops from an average of 78 citations per chapter (for the first eleven chapters) to 31 for the final three. This last trio of chapters skew toward a more anecdotal perspective. There is nothing wrong with that, of course, but it seemed too abrupt a departure from the trend which preceded it.

As a Caribbean man I was hoping for something that would add novelty to my existing knowledge of the region. Gibson's book essentially complements and supplements what most Western-based books already say.
Author 6 books258 followers
April 25, 2020
More like 3 and a 1/2 stars.
This is a pretty good history of the Caribbean region but, like all histories of all regions, whatever they are, it suffers from trying to take on too much all at once. This isn't Gibson's fault. She's a fine writer who thankfully veers away from analysis and jargon, taking history for what it is and trying to place the region in its proper context, that is, the empire(s) of the title and the current state of the region as a kind of invented tourist backwater that ignores the myriad social and economic issues.
Gibson succeeds best when she sticks to her guns with what I just mentioned. The early sections on the colonial period are good and she does the best she can to cover scads of little islands and the Central/South American fringe. Once things move into the modern era, the work starts to wilt a little. It's a given that regional histories are going to be dominated by certain entities. Here, as you might have guessed, these are Cuba and Haiti. Weirdly, some space is filled with goings-on in the Central/South American fringe, which I suppose is pertinent, but takes up space where some of the other areas of the actual Caribbean might've been focused on.
Because of the sheer scale of the territories involved, you're not going to get much modern stuff on anything beyond Cuba or Haiti, as everything else is given short thrift because of space considerations. Still, though, it's a fine book if you know nothing about the Caribbean, but will feel lacking if you know some and want more.
Profile Image for Kathleen Lewis.
144 reviews2 followers
June 21, 2024
What I wish I learned in history classes. This is a masterpiece about the Caribbean Islands that focuses on how economics was and still is at play in how large and more powerful nations collect, trade, occupy and control these islands and the native-born people. The author highlights native-born leaders and the collective efforts and courage that led toward independence.
Profile Image for John.
678 reviews41 followers
December 30, 2014
There are many histories of the Americas that begin with Columbus's landing in what were to become known as the West Indies, but this is perhaps one of the few accessible accounts which focus on the Caribbean itself, and which follow through right to the present day. Carrie Gibson's thesis is that the Caribbean was a unique crossroads for global empires, focusing of course on the European empires but showing how power was later conceded to the United States, but without forgetting the minor roles played by other imperial powers such as the Chinese.

Her thesis stands up very well and proves an excellent basis for a book which could easily have become a collection of bit parts given the number and diversity of the islands. Very sensibly, she extends her coverage to the Caribbean littoral, particularly Central America and Guyana and its neighbours, but not forgetting the influence of Florida, Colombia and Venezuela. If she focuses (as she concedes) on the major islands that were Spanish, British and French colonies, that is excusable as it allows a more manageable story.

Another challenge is to encapsulate more than 500 years of history in a single text. Inevitably Gibson is selective, but still manages to capture well the flow of events and their interconnectedness across the different Caribbean territories (not forgetting the very Caribbean nature of the Atlantic coasts of Central America, which until very recently have often had closer relations with Caribbean nations than with their own).

Obviously, several cross-cutting themes emerge, such as the harsh treatment and in many cases the extinction of indigenous peoples, the prevalence of crops such as sugar, tobacco and bananas and the ways in which their cultivation affected social conditions and political change, and the growth of the slave trade which these crops necessitated. Once crop specialisation and the slave trade began, Gibson shows how together they shaped the societies and the politics of the region, not only during the long history of slavery itself but also in its aftermath - in which conditions for black and other poor workers were generally only slightly improved. In particular, she shows how this interaction influenced the development of dictatorships in the larger Caribbean islands and was also crucial to the United States' growing and later determinant role in the region, as it took over from the waning European colonial powers and sought to maintain its growing control over trade and also over political developments which might threaten its commercial dominance.

As I read Gibson’s book, in Cuba, the ‘Cuban Five’ who had been imprisoned by the US since 1998, were released. Gibson wrote an interesting piece in the Guardian on reactions in Havana, while my own impressions came from rural Cuba (see http://www.lrb.co.uk/blog/2014/12/29/...). Also in the Guardian, Martin Kettle made the point that the warming of US-Cuba relations doesn’t mean that Cuba is ‘coming in from the cold’ (as it was described in much of the media). Rather it is part of the process by which the US rejoins the modern world, by perhaps starting to give up the imperial ambitions that Britain, Spain and France largely renounced in the last century. Nowhere have these different empires interacted more than in the Caribbean, and Carrie Gibson’s book does justice to the complex history that has resulted, right up to the present day.
Profile Image for Oleksandr Zholud.
1,614 reviews158 followers
September 17, 2022
This is a non-fic as the title suggests about the history of the Caribbean, from the coming of Columbus in 1492 (pre-Columbus cultures are mentioned but briefly because there is not a lot that remained) and to the 2000s. I read it as a part of monthly reading for September 2022 at Non Fiction Book Club group.

The book starts with what was going off in the Iberian peninsula decades before the Columbus voyage, giving a general outline of thoughts and attitudes. The author also clearly states at the beginning that what we know under a single umbrella of the term the Caribbean is actually always was and is a very diverse set of cultures and people – native, imported African slaves, creoles, genetic and ethnic mixing. Because for a long period the isles and Central American coasts were used in agriculture, esp., coffee, tobacco, bananas and sugar cane, all these plants are discussed in detail – their paths to the region and their effect on local development. I think the author is a bit overzealous when she states “that so much of Caribbean history was transformed – deformed – by the worthless commodity of sugar. Of course, it wasn’t financially worthless, then or now, but the human body does not need it to survive.” While technically true, sugar is 100% hydrocarbons, which are part of what people need to consume to survive and because it was evolutionary favorable, humans have a taste for sugar – eating ripen fruits gave more calories and better survival chances (and gives sweet tooth and obesity now), so worthlessness is overstated. There are hypotheses that assume that the industrial revolution was literarily fueled by sugar – giving enough quick energy to workers to work 8-12 hours daily.

The author describes political developments and revolutions on the islands and in some cases I’ve read alternative descriptions of them, which highlight points omitted by this book, for example on Haiti quite different details are given in The Americas In The Revolutionary Era. Also on Panama channel her description, while again technically correct is much less detailed than The Path Between the Seas: The Creation of the Panama Canal, 1870-1914 (but the latter is a whole large book on the subject). So, while she states “Angrily, the United States searched for someone to lead separatist Panamanians in a ‘revolution’, the first major incident in a long line of such interference in Central America.” as a purely US meddling, David McCullough wrote that (I cannot find and exact quote, but wiki also mentions that) there were over 80 attempts of Panama to secede from Colombia in 19th and early 20th century. Bearing in mind these different interpretations on parts where I read other sources I cannot be sure about author’s other claims, where she is (so far) the only source I have.

On a small but interesting for me discovery – “Would-be colonizers also came from the Baltic duchy of Kurland, who set up Fort St James in the estuary of the Gambia river around 1651, and later added seven more forts. A few years later, eighty Kurland families went to Tobago to establish a colony, with the intention of growing tobacco to sell to Russia.” – Kurland was on the territory of present-day Latvia, I never thought that they had colonies as well. Also, there is info about the Jamaican religion Rastafarianism, which to my shame I earlier assumed was just a mockery of organized religion.

Overall a solid overview, very wide but therefore a bit shallow. A great first step before delving into more detailed research on a specific theme or another.
Profile Image for John.
84 reviews
August 13, 2014
Read a galley of this while vacationing in the Virgin Islands this month. Not a typical beach read, but Carrie Gibson's writing is clear, lucid, and engaging, and the wide range of colonial adventures and misadventures in the region make for a fascinating read. Much of of the subject matter and episodes were already familiar to me, yet I still learned a great deal. Highly recommended for anyone interested in the history of this part of the America's and in particular a view into the often overlooked fact that much of previous history was written by and biased toward the European/Western perspective.
Profile Image for Porter Broyles.
452 reviews65 followers
October 8, 2022
This book should be must reading for anybody who is interested in racial history or the history of slavery.

The Caribbean was where Europeaners first encountered indigenious people of the "new world." How Europeans viewed/treated the locals would go on to affect relationships throughout the area for the next 400+ years!

The various islands each served as a microcosm of how things might evolve over the next few years.

Profile Image for John Becker .
126 reviews10 followers
April 4, 2022
Was very disappointed in this book. Not what I expected and should have paid more attention to the negative reviews. The author being a journalist for the Guardian showed her leanings.

Having been to the Caribbean about 15 times, visiting 9 different beautiful Islands and enjoying the friendly locals very much, it was time to read a history of the region. It had been a long time since reading James Michener's "Caribbean".

According to the author the European Empires, Spanish, British, French and Dutch brought destruction, chaos and disorder through a system of suppression and enslavement. And in modern times the U.S. played not so good a role either. Much of the book went on and on with dates, events, names, showing the author's research skills. This made it a struggle to read

The author did seem to speak well of Cuba. Though this 500 year history can be an uncomfortable fact, I felt beaten over the head. Now should I feel guilt about my upcoming second visit to Barbados?
51 reviews
August 18, 2015
This is an excellent account! I'm no expert, but this year I read Slavery by Another Name, The Half Has Never Been Told, and The New Jim Crow. This book provides a broader picture, but an important one, on how we came to be where we are today. As with any good book of history, I want to ask Gibson a million questions about the present. This is really well done, an illuminating overview of a large tumultuous story.
Profile Image for Michael Huang.
1,065 reviews53 followers
March 3, 2019

The story starts with Columbus who grew up in Genoa when exploration is a new trend. Under the Papal backing of converting non-believers, Portugal started exploring first Madeira for indigenous people as slaves. Later, the frontier moved to the Caribbeans. The European conflict between Catholics and Protestants also extended to the sea. Private citizens are encouraged by the crown to attack Spanish ship. They like to consider themselves loyal citizens as opposed to lawless pirates. These people move around islands when not attacking ships. They hunt wild pigs and sell meat and hides. The jerky meat is call "viande boucanee", and these people are hence known as Buccaneers. That explains the people are European decedents.

The indigenous people are believed to come from South America some 6000 years ago. There are different tribes such as the Caribs and the Tainos. Some are fierce people that fought the Spaniards, others are believed to practice cannibalism. Some became friends with the English as the enemy of the enemy.

A third group of people are slaves brought to the region by the Europeans to cultivate sugar. Sugar is not native to the region. Some enterprise Dutch Jew brought it due to the perfect condition. The sugar trade needed slaves. Unlike the 1500s when the Spaniards and Portuguese brought slaves to Europe, the new slave trade route is from Africa to West Indies and America.

Apart from the ethnic background, the political control is also complicated due to the changing alliances among the European empires and later the US. The French and the Brits are fighting. Then the US with Brits. Territories were exchanged, ceded...

Gradually, controlling the slave population becomes more challenging. Different regions started their own route to independence. The history is complicated with stories of the likes of Castro and Duvalier. Under their own control, the economy of the region also changed. Instead of just sugar, the region starts to export banana, drugs, boos, and the images of paradise.

The Caribbean and central America lay in the "backyard" of the US, which makes them great destinations for field trips during the cloudy and wintry time of the year when kids have a few week-long breaks. I like to find out more about their culture and nature. This book came in handy to give an overview of the region in general. However, the book is too comprehensive to my liking and not synoptic enough.
2,048 reviews117 followers
August 25, 2022
Covering five centuries, numerous countries and a wide range of topics, this history of the Caribbean tried to weave sweeping panoramic views with numerous details. It felt like a freshman college textbook, informative but dry.
Profile Image for Nathan Albright.
4,487 reviews167 followers
September 9, 2020
It is worthwhile to beware of books written by people who have axes to grind. And this book is certainly an example of that genre, a work which has a certain anti-white attitude to it that makes it a problematic example of a history about a region that has more than a bit of tension regarding its identity. The author notes within the Caribbean that economic viability has often required the service of white (and brown) people to whites in various fashion, be it as slaves or workers in a plantation, or as tourism workers to privileged white tourists who are fond of traveling to places but who clearly remain outsiders to the places where they go, and the author seems to resent that. The author also notes that in cases where there is a celebration of the identity of the Tainos or Caribs, there is often a desire on the part of people not to define themselves as blacks, with a corresponding degree of hostility to the politics of black nationalism that have been all too common (and all too destructive to the well-being of post-independence Caribbean states). Sadly, the author cannot connect the dots to tie together the wasted potential of Caribbean states with their refusal to come to terms with their petty politics of identity and grievances, a pettiness that the author all too obviously and lamentably shares.

This book is about 350 pages or so and it is divided into fourteen chapters. The author begins with some maps of the West Indies as well as a list of illustrations and an introduction that presents her worldview. After that the author discusses the discovery of the Indies by Europeans during the time of Columbus (1) and the stepping stones the West made towards the Caribbean that set certain patterns into place about how the area would be exploited (2) for profit. After that comes a discussion of the time of piracy and the entrance of the Protestants into the Caribbean (3) and then the planting of sugar (4) and the resulting rise of slavery (5). After that there are chapters about the world wars of the eighteenth century (6), Haiti (7), Cuba and the contradictions of freedom (8), and the global wars and banana wars (9), that were part of the road to independence during the latter half of the 20th century (10). The author discusses the Cold War in the tropics (11), the tensions of island life (12), the problem in trying to balance imports and exports (13), the invention of paradise for tourists (14), and a conclusion, after which there is a timeline, gazetteer, acknowledgements, bibliography, notes, and index.

Even if the author kneecaps the potential insights of this book through her strident and leftist identity politics, this book does at least forcefully present the author's case to the reader rather than sugarcoating it. Open hostility is better than concealed support, at any rate, and the author leaves the reader--if they are a white of at least a decent income and a proclivity to travel to other areas and enjoy friendly people and sunny places and beautiful islands--in no doubt of her contempt and disapproval. Fortunately, the author's disapproval doesn't account for much, and she is an honest enough historian to note the struggles that have been faced and the fact that egalitarian politics have often brought with them widespread misery to the people, and if the author is more in favor of misery for everyone than luxury for some, I am glad to have her disapproval and to match it with my own. The fact that the author can praise Cuba while viewing the United States and European nations with contempt, even as she notes the disastrous flight of people from failed post-independent states trying out socialism demonstrates that she is a person lacking in sound moral and political sense. Sadly, all too many people lacking sense feel that they are qualified to write histories, and that is the case here.
66 reviews2 followers
January 15, 2015
As Carrie Gibson notes in the conclusion to her superb history of the Caribbean, "it is much easier to imagine a West Indies without history." The prevailing view of Americans and Europeans of the Caribbean is one seen through the eyes of tourism – a paradise of exquisite beaches and rum drinks with little umbrellas. But as Ms. Gibson so aptly demonstrates, the Caribbean is not a mere footnote of history: it has been a geographic vortex of superpower entanglement and a crossroad of globalism for over half a millennium.

Ms. Gibson creates a lively narrative supercharged with facts, but none offered gratuitously. I knew I was in for a treat as the introduction began with an anecdote about a decapitated statute still standing in a park in Fort-de-France, Martinique. We learn that the statute was of Napoleon Buonaparte's first wife, who was born on the island. Many islanders believed that it was she who convinced Napoleon to reinstate slavery on this island eight years after its abolition. The book is replete with such wonderful stories of human interest and intrigue.

Ms. Gibson's history is not one written in a vacuum, but is a comprehensive worldview of nations that meddled in and forged the complex fabric of the West Indies. After covering what little is know about the native inhabitants, who were all but obliterated by Europeans, her narrative takes full swing with the struggles of the European powers. The relative might of these powers ebbed and flowed like the tides, with the flux of fortunes reflected in the changing control of various islands and coastal regions in the West Indies.

A generation of explorers beginning in the late fifteenth century, aided by new sailing technologies, advances in astronomy, and, imperatively, royal and private investment, set forth on a westward quest for gold, exotic spices, and other riches that eventually led them to the Caribbean. The fascinating twists and turns of geography, climate, and history, including the influx of many peoples, all so well documented by Ms. Gibson, set off a chain of events that Henry the Navigator could never have imagined.

The history of the Caribbean is marred by violence and shameful disregard for human dignity. Ms. Gibson spares us no detail. But the details force the reader to acknowledge the horrific reality that marked the struggles of slaves, indentured servants, and others who have been exploited by those in search of fortune. Perhaps the greatest irony of Caribbean history is that the quixotic search for riches eventually gave way to the harvesting of sugar cane. This "useless by-product of a breed of grass," as Ms Gibson calls it, became the virtual gold of the Caribbean.

It is fascinating to discover the roster of notables throughout history who left their fingerprints on the Caribbean. From Queen Elizabeth to Oliver Cromwell; Louis XIV to Napoleon, and the latter's nemesis in the fight for Haitian independence, Toussaint Louverture, their stories are varied and fascinating. Virtually every US president left his mark on the region, starting with George Washington who fought for the British in Barbados. As Ms. Gibson sardonically remarks, British generals probably wished the future first US President would have died of the smallpox he contracted in Barbados instead of developing immunity to the disease that may have spared his life during the fight for American independence.

Perhaps missing from Ms. Gibson's discussion of great historic individuals with connections to the islands is Alexander Hamilton. Born in Nevis and raised in the Caribbean, he would go on to become the primary architect of the American financial system. He was indisputably one of the most influential world figures ever born in the West Indies, and therefore, I believe would have been worthy of mention.

We learn about the intertwined relations of the Caribbean, the American British colonies, and England, and how clandestine commerce with the islands weighed heavily in the outcome of events leading to American independence. The relationship between the Caribbean and the fledgling Republic altered drastically over time as US influence in the region and the world grew exponentially. Armed with the Monroe Doctrine, the pretext of defending American national interests, and supposedly, the islanders right to freedom from foreign interference, was a thin disguise for what the US wanted: geographic positioning, the exploitation of natural and human resources, and trade policies that favored American interests. In other words, the prize of dominance in the region had changed little from the days of European hegemony.

Imperialism in the West Indies takes an interesting twist in the twenty-first century. Trade wars that once centered around mercantilism and piracy primarily involving the age-old commodities of sugar and rum more recently have triggered WTO actions, as private and public entities fight in international courts for lucrative shares of these and other commodity markets, particularly bananas. Of even more recent interest, Ms. Gibson discusses the posturing of the United States and China in the West Indies. On this development she notes, "As the axis of global power begins to tilt to the east, The Caribbean islands still find themselves in a strategic position."

The islands share common themes, such as slavery, disease, corruption and natural disasters, but Ms. Gibson describes meticulously the individual trajectories that the islands and Caribbean coastal regions followed, giving each a distinctive history. Not surprisingly, the circumstances and prosperity of islands vary significantly today. From what Ms. Gibson calls the relative egalitarianism, albeit impoverished circumstances, of Cuba, to the extreme poverty of Haiti with its man-made buffer zone for cruise ships, she covers the uniqueness of history and culture that lead to the present day individuality of the territories and countries of the West Indies.

Ms. Gibson deals extensively with the histories of Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Haiti and Jamaica. But many other islands, even the small and seemingly insignificant, warrant her mention, rendering her perspective particularly comprehensive. Thus we learn of the heyday of gangsters and nightclubs in Havana, and of the slave uprisings and brutal reprisals in Hispaniola, but we also discover the story of the violent volcanic eruptions that rocked the tiny island of Saint Vincent in the Lesser Antilles.

The scope of this book is breathtaking: Ms. Gibson does not seem to miss a single beat. From the voyages of Christopher Columbus to the modern sounds of reggae, she covers the array of culture, peoples, and events, both natural and man-made, that have molded the texture of this region. She captures admirably how the tides of fortune vacillated as wars, disease, natural calamities, and money continually changed the balance of power in the region and on individual islands.

Most who visit the West Indies may have little interest in knowing anything about the region other than where to find the most exquisite beaches and best hotels. But I believe everyone who enjoys the natural beauty and man-made comforts of this region would be well served to learn more about the complex culture, people, geography, and history of the region. Perhaps Caribbean cruise ships should consider leaving a copy of Ms. Gibson's masterful history in every cabin. Even a mere perusal of this book could be a significant eye-opener for the less informed into the broader vistas of the West Indies.


Profile Image for Victor Moore.
15 reviews
July 24, 2020
My thoughts on this book are a bit complicated. It’s pros are that it is a great, albeit shallow look, at the 400 year history of the Caribbean region in a well researched and narratively engaging way. There are many interesting little historical tidbits that keep the book from being dry and Gibson does a solid job of pacing the book. When you’re writing about 400 years of history of multiple islands and different nations, there’s only so deep you can go, and I can definitely recommend this to anyone with a limited knowledge of Caribbean history who wants a solid overview. As a student who did three years of my History undergrad in Trinidad, her comments on the ignorance, sometimes willfully so, of tourists of the region is spot on and she shows the ridiculous stereotyping of the people of that region.

The cons, as some other reviewers have pointed out, is this has a very Eurocentric lenses and sometimes deeply plays into the what I call “oh poor them” viewpoint of the Caribbean and it’s people. While it’s undeniable that historically the Caribbean has faced atrocities and certain nations do struggle with poverty, Gibson seems to focus much more on them, then some of the more economically prosperous islands such as Barbados, St. Lucia, and Trinidad and Tobago. Gibson seems to take the extreme poverty of Jamaica and Haiti and extrapolates it across the whole region. In her sections where she is dealing with the modern Caribbean it would have been nice to see a lot more viewpoints of either modern day Caribbean historians or just everyday people living on the island. Also, while it’s partially understandable because they’re the biggest and most well known islands, Cuba, Jamaica and Hispaniola get the lions share of the attention of the book.

A solid read for someone trying to become generally knowledgeable of the region but should only be a jumping off point to deeper reading of the area if one wishes to learn more.
Profile Image for Claudia.
1,288 reviews39 followers
October 3, 2022
Gibson took on quite the task in attempting to provide a history of the Caribbean from the European annexation to the current day.

An amazing collection of information and research especially since there are so many islands with their own individual history and cultural essence. From the impact of immigration from the colonial controller to the thousands of Africans transplanted to perform the brutally hard work on cash crop plantations. The carryover of African cultural that merged with the remains of other tribes as well as the vanishing indigenous peoples. The difference in how the European overlords
treated their territories from Spain to Portugal to France and the Netherlands.

The author was determined to not this turn into a history of Cuba or Haiti but every single island looked to the other two for inspiration or caution on the 'wrong' thing to do in order to gain freedom and equality. So both countries were an influence on the area as was the looming United States with it's determination to protect the countries of the Americas from European control and interference. Although the Caribbean nations likely didn't want nor desire the United States intrusions.

Also, unfortunately, by the end it seemed like Gibson would discuss an island, the political and/or social activists that worked to bring about it's freedom or political partnership with it's former colonial control, the battles fought and won (or perhaps lost). The fight for identity and economic health. Even those islands that are tourist destinations of the cruise ships only receive a limited amount of jobs. A destination is likely controlled by the cruise ship companies and the workers live on the other side of the proverbial fence and are only allowed inside to work.

2022-207
46 reviews
September 27, 2023
A strong, but very traditional, introduction to Caribbean history. Gibson does an excellent job of exploring early colonization, environment, commodities, and slavery in the Caribbean. While primarily writing a trade and political history, she manages to incorporate some social and cultural history into her work, examining the different ways the islands were viewed by European and American powers, racial inequality, and economic inequality. Like a lot of regional histories, however, the book becomes much less focused once it reaches the 20th century, trying to cover all the major events while struggling to place them in context. While Gibson does a far better job than most at this, she too is unable to deal with the broader socio-economic and political forces shaping both individual nations and the region as a whole. Employing more theory in her work to try and explain the similarities and distinctions among the islands, as she did when recounting their colonial history, would have greatly strengthened her work. Furthermore, exploring more social history of the island would also have benefited her work by giving the islanders themselves more of a voice in her narrative, as well as reinforcing the importance of commodities, race, and changing economies in shaping the history of the region.

That being said, this is still a good introduction to Caribbean history. While readers looking for social history or people-focused history will likely be disappointed, they will still find a history that covers most of the important economic and political factors. You'll likely be left wanting more, but it should at least serve to galvanize your interest in the history of specific regions and time periods.
221 reviews2 followers
August 8, 2023
Gibson takes on a lot trying to write a history of the West Indies or the Caribbean, but there are common themes with nearly all the islands. Her title, Empire’s Crossroads is aptly titled as this area was a crossroads between the Americas and Europe and became the hub of trade through the years. Often conflicts among European countries (mainly England, France, Spain, and the Netherlands) involved these islands as well. These rivalries helped to shape the future of the islands out of which emerged a unique culture that later influenced the world. While the European powers brought order and structure they also brought destruction, chaos, and disorder as well. There is a mythology about Caribbean history with the following stages; slaves brought from Africa, worked as pirates, forced into slavery in sugar cane fields, fought in wars/rebellions, squatted on land, became unionized laborers, and finally ran a resort. Gilbert sees common characteristics among the islands such as: forts built to protect trade from pirates; smuggling of goods in and out like tobacco, coffee, chocolate; sugar plantations and sugar mills that necessitated more slave labor which led to slave codes, rebellion and violent punishments; class structure based on racism; increased involvement and interference by European countries and the U.S.; rise of Black Power; independence movements; gunboat diplomacy and occupation forces; large companies establishing plantations and taking control or heavily influencing island governments (United Fruit Company); during the Cold War confrontations between US and USSR for influence and control of islands; rise of dictatorships; new levels of smuggling of people and drugs which leads to increased gang violence; and finally a cultural explosion of music, art, religion, dance, language, literature, the Carnival, and baseball. The conclusion of the book is based on the influence of tourism; tourism and stereotypes, racism, modernization, and the fostering of the “paradise myth” of the Caribbean. Now tourists see only the resorts where the myth is promoted for money sake. A very interesting read.
Profile Image for Celine.
120 reviews1 follower
March 16, 2021
I would give this less but the text is at least intelligible. It claims to be a “new” history but is just a retelling of the same historical narrative of imperial conquest that forces the Caribbean to the periphery in favour of a European perspective. The writer’s roots in the South could have provided nuance to this history but instead dwells on existing historiography. This would have definitely benefited from depth of knowledge over breadth as the scope of the book means that the stories of numerous countries in the Caribbean are simply omitted. Overall leaves more to be desired and attests to the need for Caribbean historians to take possession of our history so that the story of the people and our islands are the focus.
Profile Image for Dylan Jones.
281 reviews2 followers
December 17, 2024
Need to chew on this longer but incredible intro to a region speed running history
Profile Image for Cara Rogers.
27 reviews
May 1, 2026
would’ve given 2.5 stars if i could.
while I think this book was well researched and the author is clearly knowledgeable about the subject, i think the editors let her down on this one.
i think the organization of this was a bit difficult to follow, there was too many stories and details included which detracted from the main points, and there were too many direct quote paragraphs that could have been summarized.
I learned a lot and got some great information out of this one - but I had to really work to read it.
Profile Image for A.
312 reviews
July 23, 2022
Empire's Crossroads took a very long time to read; but I still gave it four stars. The book is not a page turner; more like a textbook on Caribbean Island development, but it is still good. It took me nearly 6 months to finish this book but only because I would read it in bits powering through a few chapters then pausing for a month or more. This is because almost every chapter stands on its own.

The book is very well researched and while some have suggested the later chapters are 'add ons' a careful reading will reveal that these chapters, which detail more historically recent events like the rise of Communism and tourism in the Caribbean are just touching on events that haven't been written about as extensively by others as have the early events relative to Caribbean discovery, settlement, and the slave trade in the islands.

The chapters that detail how slavery ended on the island was particularly insightful. I didn't realize that Haiti gained their independence so early (1804 BTW). And it's sad to see that it is now one of the Caribbean island countries that is the least developed and with the most problems with internal strife and corruption.

Overall this is an excellent book on this subject and one that I think everyone with any interest would do well to read.
Profile Image for Xavier Patiño.
217 reviews69 followers
February 26, 2019
Many of us at some point have visited one of the many idyllic islands in the Caribbean to enjoy a nice getaway; to soak up the sun and dip our feet into the warm white sands. We swam in the warm waters of the turquoise-blue Caribbean Ocean and have downed a glass of cold rum. Maybe sipped on a fancy drink that had a little umbrella resting on the glass rim. We enjoyed our new tans and flew back home feeling rested and already counting down the days for our next vacation.

Then author Carrie Gibson demolished that dreamy, sublime picture of the Caribbean and replaced it with a scene of constant destruction, exploitation, war, slavery and racism that permeated the region for centuries. Once Christopher Columbus landed on the shores of San Salvador, in present-day Bahamas, the world changed forever.

The Spanish, British, French, Dutch and Danish had a continual tug-of-war with the islands. When the rest of Europe saw how prosperous Spain was becoming after the “discovery” of the New World, other countries jumped in on the action and began sending their own ships to collect their share of the riches and splendor. Soon tobacco, sugar, coffee, and rum began to satiate the appetite of the deprived masses of North America and Europe. The hunger and thirst for these vices were first supplied by the blood, sweat and tears of the indigenous and once their population dwindled from disease and brutality African slaves were shipped in.

Gibson details the politics and history of the region like Castro’s Cuba or the tumultuous relationship of Haiti/Dominican Republic. She does a great job at stuffing such a heavy and numerous history into 400 or so pages. The book also offers an extensive bibliography, notes and index section and Gibson does a great job at listing her sources. There are also about 20 or so full color pictures that wonderfully add to the narrative.

I recommend this book to those who are interested in the turbulent and explosive history of the Caribbean. The term “paradise” is a façade and when we can look beyond the fog made by the cruise ships and the all-inclusive resorts then one can view the unfortunate poverty and crime that the tourists don’t see.
Profile Image for Randall Wallace.
683 reviews708 followers
December 4, 2015
If you need to study Caribbean History, this is the book - lots of useful information that is hard to find. The US base for Navy destroyers at Chaguaramas, Trinidad was placed smack dab in a favorite bathing beach, which suddenly became off limits. Then eviction notices came. Sound like Okinawa’s story, anyone? From the comical Operation Urgent Fury in Grenada, the two exiles of Aristide in Haiti, to the theft of Guantanamo Bay (the last remnant of the Platt Amendment), Ms. Gibson, much her credit, does not shy away from pointing out the US’s detrimental involvement with the Caribbean.

My favorite line in the book comes from Maurice Bishop, “Most of the tourists who come to our country are white, and this clear association of whiteness and privilege is a major problem for Caribbean people just emerging out of a racist colonial history.” I loved the fact that this book also mentions how most of the visitors to the Caribbean have little to no engagement with the locals beyond those in the tourist industry. Unlike Thailand, there is no backpacker culture in the Caribbean, so there no low-carbon green way to meet locals cheaply on foot and interact with them as equals. Assume that 80% of tourist revenue leaves the island and you see another problem for locals. People go to the Caribbean to escape; and when they leave, the money escapes. Another concern is that Americans walk around in shorts and flip-flops there on a “permanent party” oblivious to the fact that the locals wear shoes, proper shirts and trousers respectably doing their daily routine. I love Jamaica Kincaid’s line at the end, “Every native would like a rest.” Bravo, terrific book…
Profile Image for N.
1,130 reviews192 followers
May 1, 2015
I don't know why I keep reading books on sweepingly vast subjects and then keep being disappointed that they don't do a good job of rendering the whole of that sweepingly vast subject. Oh, well. Some chapters of this book were great (vibrant, analytical, engrossing); others just felt like a listing of facts.

Still worth a read, though. The history of the Caribbean is not something I'd given much thought to, but Carrie Gibson makes a strong case for it playing a pivotal role in the world's history.
Profile Image for Jashvina Shah.
Author 1 book7 followers
August 29, 2019
I’ll admit I didn’t finish the book, because I was using it for a specific research purpose, so I read the first half. The history of the Caribbean is so important because of just... everything. But I agree with what others have said - this is still a Eurocentric perspective so take what you read with a grain of salt.

It’s fine for a general overview, but just throws a lot of dates and events at you and doesn’t provide anything new
Profile Image for Alex.
876 reviews7 followers
February 13, 2023
Ambitious history of the islands in the Caribbean. It is hard to weave a common history of many of the islands - they may be neighbors but much of their political history post 1850 was focused on relations with their respective European capitals vs. with each other. Book mostly felt like a series of small vignettes about specific islands - and not really what key events meant to the region as a whole.
3 reviews
August 4, 2023
Lets focus on the atrocity, the imperialism, and throw out objectivity.

A long slog through cynicism that makes it a very unlikeable read. The audio is worse than the book.
Why not objective or why not accurately describe the book in the advertisement?
Author 5 books7 followers
May 9, 2019
A once over lightly treatment - breaks no new ground that I can see.
Profile Image for Sara.
363 reviews3 followers
August 3, 2020
DNF Fine but kind of all over the place, and I was primarily interested in the Dutch Antilles which aren't really touched upon much. The rental expired and I don't see myself picking it up again.
103 reviews
October 19, 2022
Wished that the book was more focused on 19th and 20th century.
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