A haunting tale of a fourteen-year-old boy's coming of age in a political dystopia, with an introduction by Colm T ibin.
Merc Rodoreda was born in Barcelona in 1908. During the Spanish Civil War she was exiled to France and later Switzerland. Rodoreda was only able to return to Barcelona in the mid-1960s, where she wrote several prize-winning novels in Catalan, including Death in Spring, which was inspired by her experience of Franco's dictatorship. Rodoreda died in 1983, a few years before Death in Spring's first publication, and is widely regarded as the most important Catalan writer of the twentieth century.
Soaringly beautiful, urgent and disturbing... A masterpiece
*Colm Tóibín, from the introduction*
Mercè Rodoreda's artistry is of the highest order
*Diana Athill*
Dark and beautiful and brilliant
*Sarah Moss*
Rodoreda has bedazzled me
*Gabriel Garcia Marquez*
Read it for its beauty, for the way it will surprise and subvert
your desires, and as a testament to the human spirit in the face of
brutality and willful inhumanity
*NPR*
Utterly extraordinary - I have had few reading experiences like it
- it's as if one is unravelling a terrible yet irresistible secret,
the secret of death
*Claire-Louise Bennett, author of 'Pond'*
The greatest contemporary Catalan novelist and possibly the best
Mediterranean woman author since Sappho
*David H Rosenthal*
A heartbreaking, unforgettable read. One of the most important
literary works from the second half of the 20th century
*El Cultural*
It is a total mystery to me why [Rodoreda] isn't widely worshipped.
. . . She's on my list of authors whose works I intend to have read
all of before I die. Tremendous, tremendous writer
*John Darnielle, author of 'Wolf in White Van'*
One of the most radical works from the past century
*El Pais*
The novel is suspenseful, pushing the reader through the images,
memories, and voices that flow within the protagonist's often
confused mind as he develops into manhood. Just as the unnamed
protagonist must navigate a world of contradictions, the novel
reflects Rodoreda's own political, social, and literary exile while
speaking of a tyranny that feels almost uncanny in its
incantation
*Bomb Magazine*
Mercè Rodoreda is not just one of the most accomplished post-war
Catalan authors; she is also widely considered, notably by Gabriel
García Márquez, to be the greatest Spanish writer of the 20th
century
*Culture Trip*
We must be grateful to the Penguin European Writers series, a
precious venture in these dark times
*John Banville*
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