Synopsis
I did a lot of bad things, but when I was before the painter
I murmured to myself that I was sorry, that I wished I
didn't have to, and I don't know what he thought when
our eyes met, a moist blaze in the night, but I want to
believe he understood, he saw that I was doing it to save
him torment. Without further ado, without moving from
where I was, I put the pistol to his temple and blew off
his head. And then I remembered the pencil. The pencil
he carried behind his ear. This pencil...."
Manuel
Rivas has been heralded as one of the brightest in a new
wave of Spanish writers less influenced by magic realism
and more by Spanish and European traditions, as well as
the unique history of Spain over the past seventy years.
The Carpenter's Pencil was a bestseller in Spain and has
been published in nine countries.
Set
in the dark days of the Spanish Civil War, The Carpenter's
Pencil charts the linked destinies of Dr. Daniel Da Barca,
the Republican who, like his Biblical namesake, cheats
death in Franco's prisons, and Herbal, the illiterate
Falangist and Da Barca's shadow and tail, and of the unnamed
painter with the carpenter's pencil ("He does the
posters, he's the one who paints the ideas."), the
man who unites them in life and death. And of Marisa Mallo,
loved by both Da Barca and Herbal; Pepe Sanchez, the bolero
singer; "Genghis Khan," the wrestler; Dombod‡n
the Kid, the innocent; Mother Izarne, the nun; and the
legend of the estrangement of the two sisters, Life and
Death. All are bound by the events of the Civil War-the
artists and the peasants alike-and all are rendered, in
Rivas's skillful hand, with the power of the carpenter's
pencil, a pencil that draws both the measured line and
the artist's fanciful vision.