Synopsis
Spanish
writer and journalist Cercas received the prestigious
Premio Librero de Narrativa for this historical novel
about the failed execution of Rafael S nchez Mazas, one
of the intellectual architects of Spanish fascism.
In
the novel, a journalist by the name of Javier Cercas investigates
how Sánchez Mazas escaped a firing squad in 1939
and hid in the woods when the defeat of the Republic was
imminent.
The
journalist also describes Sánchez Mazas's fate
as a writer and intellectual at a time when the role of
fascism was beginning to decline within Franco's government.
Even though Cercas does not make a direct reference to
Aeschylus's The Persians [available in Spanish in Tragedias,
Gredos, 1993 Ed.] about the defeat of Persian soldiers
at Salamis in 480 B.C.E. it may well have influenced the
novel.
Just
as Aeschylus laments the fate of the Persian victims,
Cercas too grieves for the defeated, in particular for
anonymous characters who fought fascism on many fronts,
like Antoni Miralles, the loyalist soldier who saved Sánchez
Mazas's life.
The
novel, which has already gone through 12 editions in Spain,
contains a suspenseful historical investigation and philosophical
reflection on the differences between fiction and history.
Highly recommended for academic libraries that collect
contemporary Spanish historical fiction.
Source:
Publisher's Weekly