It is truly interesting to read the words of Che rather than just having people criticize (such as the university professors who prefer to teach their ideological ideas through artists and historical figures rather than seeking the truth). The only problem with the book is that the things written come from the government and library of Cuba, and evidently, those who made the book prefer to make Che a saint and don't want to show his bad and racist side... (Interestingly, the same current of anti-Americanism and anti-capitalism that is very much in vogue in the universities of the United States, where professors receive money to write and speak against the competitive life and the freedom that they consume... the irony never dies, my friends...)
There is a section near the end that I was very interested in... his sometimes profound writings on the literary works of Pablo Neruda and others. Che was truly a "Renaissance Man" and through this book we can see how close all his writings have the air and ambiance of poetry. There are also good photos (particularly a photo of Che and a very young Fidel Castro in Mexico - without a beard and in a guerrilla uniform, and another photo of Che reading a large book by Goethe - ironically, I think it is possible that Ernesto has made the same pact with Mephistopheles as Faust, the best protagonist of Goethe...)
I think this book (in Spanish and also in English for my foreign friends!) is much better than reading a seven-hundred-page biography, and the book has many photos, which is perfect for all the Che fans who always smoke marijuana and listen to Bob Marley....