The Motorcycle Diaries

Notes on a Latin American Journey

About the Book

A New York Times bestseller
With a new introduction by The Motorcyle Diaries filmmaker Walter Salles, and featuring 24 pages of photos taken by Che.


The Motorcycle Diaries is Che Guevara's diary of his journey to discover the continent of Latin America while still a medical student, setting out in 1952 on a vintage Norton motorcycle together with his friend Alberto Granado, a biochemist. It captures, arguably as much as any book ever written, the exuberance and joy of one person's youthful belief in the possibilities of humankind tending towards justice, peace and happiness.

After the release in 2004 of the exhilarating film of the same title, directed by Walter Salles, the book became a New York Times and international bestseller.

This edition includes a new introduction by Walter Salles and an array of new material that was assembled for the 2004 edition coinciding with the release of the film, including 24 pages of previously unpublished photos taken by Che, notes and comments by his wife, Aleida Guevara March, and an extensive introduction by the distinguished Cuban author, Cintio Vitier.


"A journey, a number of journeys. Ernesto Guevara in search of adventure, Ernesto Guevara in search of America, Ernesto Guevara in search of Che. On this journey, solitude found solidarity. 'I' turned into 'we.'"—Eduardo Galeano

"As his journey progresses, Guevara's voice seems to deepen, to darken, colored by what he witnesses in his travels. He is still poetic, but now he comments on what he sees, though still poetically, with a new awareness of the social and political ramifications of what's going on around him."—January Magazine

"Our film is about a young man, Che, falling in love with a continent and finding his place in it."
—Walter Salles, director of the film version of The Motorcycle Diaries

"All this wandering around 'Our America with a Capital A' has changed me more than I thought."
—Ernesto Che Guevara, from The Motorcycle Diaries
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Praise for The Motorcycle Diaries

"Most of the book is not explicitly political, but Guevara's profound radicalization is shown through his growing indignation toward American imperialism, the oppression of Indigenous people, and “profound tragedy circumscribing the life of the proletariat the world over” that he witnesses firsthand during his travels. Guevara went on to join Fidel Castro’s 1959 revolution against the Cuban government, eventually becoming the minister of industry in the new one-party Communist state. The Motorcycle Diaries is a coming-of-age story, an intimate glimpse at the beginning of one boy’s transformation into a man who some remember as a murderer and some remember as a martyr."
— Calla Walsh, Teen Vogue
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Excerpt

The Motorcycle Diaries

WALTER SALLES
introduction to the 2021 edition: the motorcycle diaries, or the rediscovery of south america

The first accounts of South America reported by Amerigo Vespucci and Pedro Álvares Cabral in the early sixteenth century describe an Edenic world. The lost El Dorado, the finis terrae of the Latins, ripe for colonization.

From this initial contradiction—how to submit an Edenic land to the designs of European invaders?—stems the majority of the continent’s structural imbalances: the massacre of indigenous tribes, the forced migration and enslavement of Africans obliged to work on monoculture plantations, and the haphazard drawing of borders between nations. This colonizing process, grounded in violence and slave labor, spawned societies whose references reflected essentially European beliefs and desires.


January 1952

When the young medical student Ernesto Guevara de la Serna (twenty-three years old) mounted the pillion of an old Norton 500 behind the biochemist Alberto Granado (twenty-nine years old), with the dream of crossing the South American continent, their understanding of the territory was limited to what history books had taught them. “We knew more about the Greeks and Phoenicians than we did about the Incas,” confessed the good-humored Granado. “We didn’t actually know the precise location of Machu Picchu.” The Motorcycle Diaries is at once a rare initiation into, and an unveiling of, a hitherto unknown reality, a unique and original physical and human geography.

Unlike the history told by the colonizers, the travel diaries of the young Ernesto begin as a picaresque account, a clin d’oeil to Cervantes, that gradually deepens as the two adventurers come into contact with the impure substance of the Latin American reality. When the social and political contradictions begin to unfurl, what started out as the diary of a road trip takes on unexpected contours: it transforms into a rite of passage that signals the gradual dawning of awareness in two Latin American youths witnessing the injustices and inequalities of a continent for the first time.

This shift becomes palpable when they reach Peru and discover the Andean and Incan heritage. It’s as if, at that moment, the course of their individual lives suddenly converges upon history with a capital H. That is when The Motorcycle Diaries veers wide of most travel accounts. The young men who reach their final destination at the continent’s northernmost tip, in Venezuela, are not the same youths who set out from their native Argentina.

Few accounts offer an expression of a sensibility this open to the world and so devoid of subterfuges. The Motorcycle Diaries provides valuable tools with which to understand how the young Ernesto could transform gradually into a political figure, with a keen perception of the afflictions suffered by those around him— and of the structural iniquities that caused them.

The Motorcycle Diaries
enables an immersion into a territory as seen through its own eyes.

What unravels from it is a genuine, singular South American identity. Nearly seven decades after it was written, Ernesto Guevara’s diaries continue to present a fascinating and urgent reflection of what is still seen as a last frontier.

Walter Salles,
May 2021

The Che Guevara Library Series

América Latina
Reminiscences of the Cuban Revolutionary War
Pasajes de la Guerra Revolucionaria
La Guerra de Guerrillas
Marx & Engels
Otra Vez
Guerrilla Warfare
Che Guevara Presente
Latin America Diaries
El Diario del Che en Bolivia
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About the Author

Ernesto Che Guevara
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About the Author

Aleida Guevara
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About the Author

Walter Salles
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About the Author

Cintio Vitier
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