After
Fidel Castro came to power in Cuba in 1959, writer
Guillermo Cabrera Infante, who had supported the
Cuban Revolution, became a cultural leader. He was appointed as director of
Lunes de Revolución, a weekly literary supplement to the Cuban magazine
Revolución. Cabrera Infante's relations with the Castro regime deteriorated and the literary supplement was shut down by the government in 1961. In 1962, he was sent to
Belgium to serve as a cultural attaché to the Cuban embassy in
Brussels. It was in Brussels that Cabrera Infante wrote the first manuscript of what would become
Tres tristes tigres.
Mario Vargas Llosa was one of the jurors of the award at the time. In 1965, Cabrera Infante returned to Cuba upon learning that his mother was ill. However, he did not arrive in time before her death and instead attended her funeral. When he attempted to fly back to Belgium with his two daughters, he was detained by authorities for four months without explanation. He eventually left Cuba, and went into exile in
Spain followed by
London. After winning the Premio Biblioteca Breve, the novel underwent the process of
censorship by the government of Francisco Franco. In 1965, Cabrera Infante was able to revise the
galley proofs of the novel and decided to rewrite several passages. The novel was originally intended for publication in 1965 but, for this reason, the printing of
Vista de amanecer en el trópico was delayed for a few years and ultimately retitled
Tres tristes tigres. These deletions were not replaced in the successive editions in Spanish. However, the deleted passages were finally restored in 1990 when Cabrera Infante completely revised his book, restoring it for the collection of the
Biblioteca Ayacucho in Venezuela. The novel's title is taken from a classic Spanish-language
tongue-twister. ==Summary==