A moving meditation on youth, love, betrayal and the media, as well as an uncompromising political novel. Cercas has yet again expanded our idea of what fiction can do
<b>Juan Gabriel Vasquez, author of <i>The Secret History of Costaguana</i></b>
His novels probe the sore spots and raw wounds of contemporary Spain, their cunning and complexity leavened by a light touch and an easy, graceful style in which captivating dialogue becomes a genuinely dialect pursuit of truth
<b>Boyd Tonkin, <i>Independent on Sunday</i></b>
The beauty of this intelligently probing novel is that one is left wondering if we ever truly know anything about anybody – that anybody including ourselves
<b><i>Scotsman</i></b>
Compelling ... Though the novel moves towards a suite of surprising and unsettling revelations about the characters, the real strengths of the book are in Cercas’s unadorned prose, once again deftly translated by Anne McLean, and in his ear for the rhythms of everyday speech
<b><i>Guardian</i></b>
Cercas adroitly balances the earlier criminal thrills with the later moral and emotional complexities
<b><i>New Statesman</i></b>
The story is told entirely through speech – different speakers addressing an unnamed interviewer in alternating chapters. It’s an elegant construction that gives immediacy and pace from the start
<b><i>Literary Review</i></b>
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Javier Cercas was born in 1962. He is a novelist, short-story writer and columnist, whose books include Soldiers of Salamis (which sold more than a million copies worldwide, won six literary awards in Spain and was filmed by David Trueba), The Tenant and The Motive, The Speed of Light and The Anatomy of a Moment. His books have been translated into more than twenty languages. He lives in Barcelona.
Anne McLean is the translator of works by Julio Cortázar, Hector Abad, Ignacio Martínez de Pisón, Enrique Vila-Matas and Juan Gabriel Vásquez among others. She has twice won the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize: in 2004 for Soldiers of Salamis by Javier Cercas and in 2009 for The Armies by Evelio Rosero. She lives in Toronto.