Miaow
By (Author) Benito Perez Galdos
By (author) Margaret Jull Costa
The New York Review of Books, Inc
NYRB Classics
8th July 2025
10th June 2025
United States
Paperback
304
Width 127mm, Height 203mm
A Dickensian tale of ambition, family, and financial ruin by the most important Spanish novelist after Cervantes, this tragicomic novel about a patriarch struggling to keep his ungrateful family from ruin is at turns scathing and hilarious. A Dickensian tale of ambition, family, and financial ruin by the most important Spanish novelist after Cervantes, this tragicomic novel about a patriarch struggling to keep his ungrateful family from ruin is at turns scathing and hilarious. Ram n Villaamil has been a loyal civil servant his whole life, but a change in government leaves him out of a job and still two months short of qualifying for his pension. Initially optimistic that he'll be able to find work and pull his family out of their financial straits, he spends his days visiting the Administration, pestering his ex-colleagues to put in a good word for him, and begging his friends in high places for money. At home, Villaamil's wife, daughter, and sister-in-law-whose feline appearances earn them the nickname "the Miaows"-are unimpressed by Villaamil's failures, and the only joy left in Villaamil's life is his young grandson Luis. When Luis's disgraced father, the handsome and dastardly Victor Cadalso reappears in their lives with promises of easing their financial burdens, Villaamil has no choice but to allow him back into their midst, even as he knows there is nothing pure about Victor's intentions, and that his return could bring them all to ruin. Comparable to the best of Balzac and Dickens, Benito Perez Gald s's satire of lower middle-class life offers a scathing critique of the hypocrisy and corruption within nineteenth-century Spanish society as well as a potent exploration of the value of human life outside of work. Margaret Jull Costa's inimitable translation captures all the tragicomic vitality of Perez Gald s's prose, and proves that he is indeed "the best Spanish writer of the nineteenth century" (Mario Vargas Llosa).
Benito Perez Gald s (1843-1920) is considered the greatest Spanish writer after Cervantes. In a career that spanned more than forty years, Gald s wrote nearly eighty novels and some twenty plays. Tristana, also available as an NYRB Classic, and other books of his were adapted for the screen by the great surrealist filmmaker Luis Bunuel. Margaret Jull Costa is a translator of Spanish and Portugeuse literature and poetry and has won many prizes, including the PEN Translation Prize. She has translated works by novelists such as E a de Queir z, Jose Saramago, Javier Marias, and Fernando Pessoa, as well as poets such as Sophia de Mello Breyner Andresen and Ana Luisa Amaral. She lives in the United Kingdom.