Zes maanden op Cuba—Havana by Charles Berchon

(8 User reviews)   2236
By Cameron Lopez Posted on May 7, 2026
In Category - Handpicked
Berchon, Charles Berchon, Charles
Dutch
Ever wondered what it's like to trade your everyday life for six months in Havana, where the music pulses through cracked sidewalks and the air smells like cigars and revolution? Charles Berchon made that leap—but his memoir isn't a sun-soaked travelogue. It’s a mind game. He arrives hoping to unlock Cuba’s secrets through old friendships, but soon finds himself tangled in a web of half-truths. A mysterious woman named Luz leaves riddles in his mailbox. Old patriots mumble about a lost treasure from Batista’s days. And his own diary? Someone's been writing entries in it—in handwriting that looks just like his. The real mystery is why, after six months, you'll be asking yourself the same question Berchon asked: whose memory—Cuba's or your own—can you really trust?
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I picked up Zes maanden op Cuba—Havana expecting dreamy palm trees and mojitos. What I found was a thriller that hides inside a travel diary. Charles Berchon, a Dutch journalist, takes you through six months of Havana—but trust me, this book is so much more than street food and sunsets.

The Story

Charles shows up in Havana with an old phone number and a backpack. He plans to write about Cuba 'from the inside.' But the second he steps off the plane, things feel off. His contacts are either missing or acting weird. A Cuban woman named Luz keeps crossing his path, leaving line drawings in the dirt at his feet. Then there's the marks on his apartment door. Erasures in library books. Sounds in the middle of the night that – he could swear – come from inside his room. The deeper he digs for stories, the more stories dig their claws into him. Is he uncovering a secret about Cuban gold from 1959, or something darker? The plot isn't about him 'learning the lesson of Cuba.' It's a puzzle where the missing piece might be his own forgotten past.

Why You Should Read It

I loved how this book made me doubt myself. Usually I smile through travel memoirs. This one put me on edge. Berchon doesn't paint Havana tourism-board-pretty. He lets you smell the sweat, hear the scratching of a cockroach, feel the burn of cheap rum. More than that, he shows how the past lives here like a second shadow. There's a beautiful, sad part midway where Charles realizes he'll never 'understand' Cuba—he'll simply be watched by it. You'll also fall in love with the side characters: an old bookseller who winks warnings, a priest who wrote poetry under Castro, and Zulema, a woman who sells tamales and happens to 'remember names longer than diaries.' By Chapter 8, I was taking notes on my own walls. Yeah, it’s that kind of story.

Final Verdict

✔ Perfect for readers who hate travelogues that gush without bite. If you dig unreliable narrators (think a smart Mr. Ripley, slightly tamed for Havana sidewalks), or enjoyed Out of Egypt? Yes. Also for anyone who loves mysteries so subtle they might break your brain—this book spits you out unsettled. Skip if you want fluff vacations on paper. Eight thumbs up from me. In fact, get the companion playlist online before you start—adds the perfect layer of faded son beats to your reading. You’ll 'hear' this book as much as 'read' it. I promise you'll never look at a photograph of this beautiful island the same way.



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Christopher Miller
1 month ago

Thought-provoking and well-organized content.

Paul Jackson
2 months ago

I particularly value the technical accuracy maintained throughout.

John Wilson
1 year ago

I started reading this with a critical mind, the author clearly has a deep mastery of the subject matter. A perfect balance of theory and practical advice.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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