‘A wonderful book, which offers important insights into the multifaceted dynamics of anarchist transnationalism in the Caribbean. Never compromising on erudition and depth of analysis, Shaffer writes an engrossing, vividly rendered narrative, full of compassion and a dramatic sense of history. This is a remarkable epic of (counter-)imperialism in multiple sites of staggering international mobilities and activism – a tremendous read for anyone with an interest in anarchism and radical activism in the Americas and globally.'
Constance Bantman - University of Surrey
‘This landmark and impressive book studies authoritarian and anti-imperialist politics in the Caribbean with a special focus on transnational flows of radical activists. By examining Cuba, Puerto Rico, Panama, Mexico and the US, Shaffer demonstrates the value of a focus on networks and cross-border frames. Revolutionary cartography at its best.'
Barry Carr - La Trobe University, Victoria
‘Anarchists of the Caribbean is a monumental achievement. Deeply researched and engagingly written, it deftly relates the complex history of the social, cultural, and political ways anarchist activists contended with US imperialism, capitalist expansion, state repression, and the rise of international communism in the Caribbean region. Undoubtedly, it will lead to a major rethinking of the histories of the Caribbean, Latin America, and global anarchism.'
Steven J. Hirsch - Washington University
'Shaffer’s book is a meticulously researched account of the transnational networks anarchists forged in the early twentieth century … a most welcome contribution to the study of the early twentieth-century Latin American Left'.
Frances Sullivan
Source: Humanities and Social Sciences
‘The archive [Shaffer] has built for this book is the product of an intellectual endeavor that took him many years to craft. This titanic task has enriched the book’s narrative and makes it compulsory reading for anyone interested in the Hispanic Caribbean at the turn of the twentieth century.’
Jorell Meléndez-Badillo
Source: New West Indian Guide