Growing up in Cuba, Rafael Martinez didn’t have many toys. “There were many things we wanted, but we just didn’t have. So everything came from our imagination.”
Ana Maria Robbin has spent most of her life on Key Biscayne. After her family arrived from Colombia in 1972, she and her brother, Juan, quickly took to the island’s
Each of us is shaped by our life experiences. As Nancy Elisburg sees it, the jobs we hold, the history we live through, and the people we meet along the
In the early 1950s, when Key Biscayne was first being developed, many Miami residents viewed the drive across Rickenbacker Causeway as an inconvenience.