
When Cubans Went to War
by Matias Travieso-Diaz
A sweeping historical novel set in nineteenth-century Cuba, When Cubans Went to War follows one family through upheaval, rebellion, and the struggle for independence as personal destinies collide with the fate of a nation.
Paperback | 242 pages | 6 × 9 in
Publication Date: November 1, 2025
Paperback ISBN: 979-8-9913704-6-2
$19.95 (Paperback)
About the Book
In the second half of the nineteenth century, a wealthy Havana family undergoes a drastic lifestyle change when they move to a small provincial town at the other end of Cuba following the purchase of a sugar mill. The move becomes permanent but, over the years, the three Serrano children seek to get away: the oldest daughter, Graciela, goes to New York to free herself from the cultural bounds of Cuban society; the rebellious middle child, Carmela, elopes with a man she does not love and settles in a farm; the youngest, Alberto, goes back to Havana and becomes active in the incipient attempts to free Cuba from Spain's stifling rule. At the end, however, the three return home and meet their destinies. Throughout it all, the children's mother, Cecilia, holds the family together and manages to keep the sugar mill operating while providing tenuous support for their adventures.
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When Cubans Went to War is an absorbing family saga that unfolds during a critical decade in Cuba's history, told against the backdrop of the rise and decline of the sugar industry, the United States civil war, the efforts to end slavery, rebellion against Spain's tyrannical regime, and social inequality among Cubans and between them and the Spanish carpetbaggers that rule the island.
Order the Book
Genre
IC056050 (Fiction / Hispanic & Latino / Historical)
FIC147000 (Fiction / Places / Caribbean & Latin America)
FIC014100 (Fiction / Historical / 19th Century / General)
What People Are Saying About When Cubans Went to War
ALSO BY MATIAS TRAVIESO-DIAZ
The Calm Before the Storm
A historical novel set in 1850s Cuba on the brink of revolution.
Set in the final years of Spanish colonial rule, 1859: The Calm Before the Storm follows a Cuban family navigating corruption, inequality, and the mounting tensions that would soon erupt into open rebellion. A portrait of a society poised between stability and upheaval, the novel captures the human stakes behind a nation’s turning point.
About Matias Travieso-Diaz
Matias Travieso-Diaz is a former engineer and attorney who, following retirement, redirected his efforts towards fiction writing. He lives with his daughter and two dogs in the Washington, D.C. area. He describes himself as an “Animal Farm's goat, Packers and Barça fan, and lover of opera, classical theater, jazz, Italian food and vino” Born in Cuba, Matias migrated to the United States as a young man. He took up creative writing eight years ago and, since that time, he has authored a great number of short stories, over two hundred of which have been published or accepted for publication in short story anthologies, magazines, blogs, audio books and podcasts. He has completed three novels: The Taíno Women, set in Cuba's early colonial period; The Travels of Lázaro Serrano, set in Cuba and Jamaica in 1762-63; and When Cubans Went to War, dealing with the backdrop for Cuba's ten-year war of independence in the Nineteenth Century. He is working on a fourth novel that takes Cuba's history to its final independence in 1902.


