This book was a surprisingly enjoyable and easy read given the weightiness of the topic. The style was very fluid and the descriptive narratives helped me imagine the setting and historical characters. Most importantly, the author tackled the difficult issue of poverty, underdevelopment and historical legacies with a great deal of insight and fairness. The book really made me rethink my opinions of foreign aid to Haiti (outside the aid sent for the earthquake).
What surprised me was that the author has a rather empowering message: Haitians are smart, capable and resilient people and would benefit more from a stable political environment, economic outlets for their talents and a healthy environment than from foreign aid money that never changes the big issues. Yes, the colonial legacy set Haiti on the wrong track, but that does not predestine Haiti to a dim future. Rather, as the book argues, we need to stop assuming Haiti isn't capable of stability and prosperity and need to support real, sustainable change. What's more, as history has often shown, such change needs to come from within in order to make it real. I love that this book actually offers a final chapter with a "development plan".
For me, this is good history with a practical, meaningful contemporary application (learning from the past to improve the future). I highly recommend this book for anyone interested in Haiti, foreign aid or underdevelopment.