
Book Review: Niebla by Miguel de Unamuno (1914)
There is a famous anecdote about the Basque-born writer Miguel de Unamuno (b.1864), which Hugh Thomas documents in his excellent book, The Spanish Civil War. Much to the horror of his socialist friends, Unamuno, a rector at the University of Salamanca, had supported the Falangist uprising - but was then left in a state of shock by the growing canon of atrocities inflicted on Republican friends and intellectuals. It all came to a head at a poisonous public celebration of Colum

Sin Noticias de Gurb (1991) by Eduardo Mendoza
This week in book review it's Eduardo Mendoza's science fiction parody, Sin Noticias de Gurb, in which two alien shapeshifters explore Barcelona eating churros and observing the banal but hilarious paradoxes of a consumerist society. '0.01 (local time) Landing effectuated without difficulty. Conventional propulsion (amplified). Velocity of landing: 6.30 on the conventional scale (restricted)- 07.00 Obeying orders (mine) Gurb prepares to make contact with life forms (real and

The Tree of Knowledge by Pío Baroja (1911)
This week in Book Club: Spanish realist Pio Baroja’s semi-autobiographical account of a medical student in an existential pickle in turn-of-the-Century Madrid. Baroja's most acclaimed novel, The Tree of Knowledge is a fiercely critical portrait of late-19th Century Spain and the frustrations of a young progressive trying to make a career for himself in its languishing society. El Árbol de la Ciencia is Pio Baroja’s study of the career and attitude of a late 19th Century medic
The Cathedral of the Sea by Ildefonso Falcones
This book followed on from the immense success of another piece of Barcelona period fiction - Zafon's The Shadow of The Wind - onto the international bestseller list, establishing the emergence of a new wave of extremely popular Spanish hist-lit authors. An epic journey from serfdom to nobility woven around the construction of the magnificent Santa Maria del Mar church in Barcelona, La Catedral del Mar tells the story of Arnau Estanyol, the son of a 14th Century peasant who h

Victus by Albert Sánchez Piñol
‘There are men who are born smeared in a patina of moral oil; misfortune slides off them like water. But those same men stain everything they touch.’ Victus is a dirty, foul-mouthed, bloody-nosed, big, heavy, long novel about a period in history no historian has ever succeeded in representing as interesting; the dreaded Spanish War of Succession. It’s a period where Europe goes to war in Spain, signs a load of pacts, betrays each other and decides to get out while it still ca

Six Great Books About Spain in English
Whether it’s Norman Lewis eulogizing Costa Brava fishermen, Robert Hughes taking on Barcelona’s modernist monuments or Hemingway’s Civil War opus For Whom The Bell Tolls, few countries have offered refuge and inspiration to so many foreign writers. We begin with Laurie Lee, a young vagabond with a violin, who portrayed street life in towns and villages across Spain in the period just before the Civil War… As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning by Laurie Lee ‘…Ominous days of n

Spanish Book Club: Los Mares del Sur by Manuel Vazquez Montalbán
This week, a postmodern take on the hardboiled detective novel, the Planeta-award winning and internationally acclaimed Los Mares del Sur, by food-obsessed Catalan writer Manuel Vazquez Montalbán. ‘Three months without eating a rosco,’ begins the second chapter of the Barcelona-based detective novel The South Seas. ‘Not a whiff of a husband looking for his wife. No father looking for his son. No idiot trying to prove his wife’s adultery. What’s going on? Don’t women run away