Books Burn Badly
By (Author) Manuel Rivas
Translated by Jonathan Dunne
Vintage Publishing
Vintage
15th February 2011
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Fiction in translation
Narrative theme: Coming of age
869.342
Paperback
560
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 35mm
368g
A masterpiece by one of Europe's greatest living writers - a brilliant evocation of the Spanish Civil War On 19 August 1936 Hercules the boxer stands on the quayside at Coruna and watches Fascist soldiers piling up books and setting them alight. With this moment a young carefree group of friends are transformed into a broken generation. Out of this incident during the early months of Spain's tragic civil war, Manuel Rivas weaves a colourful tapestry of stories and unforgettable characters to create a panorama of twentieth-century Spanish history. For it is not only the lives of Hercules the boxer and his friends that are tainted by the unending conflict, but also those of a young washerwoman who sees souls in the clouded river water and the stammering son of a judge who uncovers his father's hidden library. As the singed pages fly away on the breeze, their stories live on in the minds of their readers.
It's time for reviewers and sundry pundits to quit the flattering comparisons with Lorca, Joyce and Garcia Marquez. Manuel Rivas reads like no-one else on the planet...one of those novels to lavish on friends... Manuel Rivas' sweeping novel, translated into English for the first time, is an undoubted classic * Scotsman *
This is an exceptional book by an exceptional writer... a unique literary enterprise * Independent *
A novelistic tour-de-force...hauntingly poetic use of language and light touch...Rivas never loses faith in the human ability to overcome the bleakest of situations * Irish Times *
His most substantial work to date * London Review of Books *
His boldest take yet on the war's repercussions in his native Galicia... a work of unusual beauty * Financial Times *
Manuel Rivas was born in A Coruna in 1957. He writes in the Galician language of north-west Spain. He is well known in Spain for his journalism, as well as for his prize-winning short stories and novels, which include the internationally acclaimed The Carpenter's Pencil. His works have been translated into twenty languages.