Histories
of revolutions often focus
on military, political, or
economic upheavals but sometimes
neglect to connect these larger
events to the daily lives of
'ordinary' people. Yet the
peoples' perception that 'things
are worse than before' can
topple revolutionary governments,
as shown by recent defeat of
the Sandinista regime in Nicaragua
and the governments of Eastern
Europe. Providing the kind
of prosaic, revealing details
that more formal histories
have excluded, My Car in
Managua offers an objective,
often humorous description
of the great difficulties and
occasional pleasures of life
in Nicaragua during the Sandinista
revolution.
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