Beyond the postcard image of turquoise waters and sun-drenched beaches lies the real Caribbean: a sea that has been, for five hundred years, one of the most turbulent and contested arenas in world history. This sweeping narrative dismantles the tourist brochure to reveal a story of dramatic collision, of immense wealth and unspeakable suffering, of empire and rebellion, and of extraordinary human resilience. The history of this sea is the history of how our modern, globalized world came to be. Beginning with the vibrant societies of the First Islanders before 1492, this book chronicles the seismic cataclysm of the Columbian Exchange and the demographic collapse that followed.
The narrative then plunges into the brutal heart of the colonial era, a time when the Caribbean became the crucible of the modern global economy. It charts the rise of the Spanish Main, as conquistadors plundered a continent for gold and silver, which was then funneled through fortified ports like Havana and Cartagena in legendary treasure fleets. When gold gave way to "white gold," the book details the horrific efficiency of the sugar and slave economy that remade the islands into brutal plantation factories. Out of this violence, an age of chaos and opportunity was born, giving rise to the buccaneers and privateers of the Golden Age of Piracy, whose daring raids on the Spanish Empire turned Port Royal into the wickedest city on earth.
This history charts the long and bloody struggle for freedom that defined the region. It provides a gripping account of the Haitian Revolution, the only successful slave revolt in human history, which created the world's first Black republic and sent shockwaves across the Americas. The narrative follows the continental cry for freedom as figures like Sim n Bol var waged epic wars of independence against Spain, and it details the slow, agonizing dawn of abolition across the islands. As the old European empires crumbled, a new power emerged from the north. The book traces the rise of American influence, from the audacious declaration of the Monroe Doctrine to the decisive Spanish-American War and the monumental construction of the Panama Canal, which turned the Caribbean into an "American lake."
Bringing the story into the modern era, the book navigates the complex crosscurrents of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. It explores the Caribbean's role as a Cold War hotbed, crystallized by the Cuban Revolution and the thirteen days in 1962 when the world stood on the brink of nuclear war. It follows the winds of change as dozens of colonies journeyed to independence, and it examines the forces that shape the contemporary Caribbean: the rise of tourism as a new economic engine, the corrosive impact of the international drug trade, and the vibrant cultural expressions, from calypso to reggae, that have given the region a powerful voice on the world stage. Finally, it confronts the daunting challenges of today, from persistent economic struggles to the existential threat of the climate crisis, offering a comprehensive and essential history of a sea that connected worlds and, in doing so, created a new one.