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War, So Much War
Paperback

War, So Much War

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Featured on Jeff VanderMeer’s Epic List of Favorite Books Read in 2015

Rodoreda had bedazzled me by the sensuality with which she reveals things within the atmosphere of her novels. -Gabriel Garcia Marquez

Rodoreda plumbs a sadness that reaches beyond historic circumstances … an almost voluptuous vulnerability. -Natasha Wimmer, The Nation

It is a total mystery to me why [Rodoreda] isn’t widely worshipped; along with Willa Cather, she’s on my list of authors whose works I intend to have read all of before I die. Tremendous, tremendous writer. -John Darnielle, The Mountain Goats

Despite its title, there is little of war and much of the fantastic in this coming-of-age story, which was the last novel Merce Rodoreda published during her lifetime.

We first meet its young protagonist, Adria Guinart, as he is leaving Barcelona out of boredom and a thirst for freedom, embarking on a long journey through the backwaters of a rural land that one can only suppose is Catalonia, accompanied by the interminable, distant rumblings of an indefinable war. In vignette-like chapters and with a narrative style imbued with the fantastic, Guinart meets with numerous adventures and peculiar characters who offer him a composite, if surrealistic, view of an impoverished, war-ravaged society and shape his perception of his place in the world.

As in Rodoreda’s Death in Spring, nature and death play an fundamental role in a narrative that often takes on a phantasmagoric quality and seems to be a meditation on the consequences of moral degradation and the inescapable presence of evil.

Merce Rodoreda (1908-1983) is widely regarded as the most important Catalan writer of the twentieth century. Exiled in France and Switzerland following the Spanish Civil War, Rodoreda began writing the novels and short stories-Twenty-Two Short Stories, The Time of the Doves, Camellia Street, Garden by the Sea-that would eventually make her internationally famous.

Maruxa Relano is a journalist and translator based in Barcelona. She has worked as a translator for The Wall Street Journal, a writer for NY1, and wrote articles for the

New York Daily News

, Newsday, and New York magazine, among other publications.

Martha Tennent was born in the U.S, but has lived most of her life in Barcelona where she served as founding dean of the School of Translation and Interpreting at the University of Vic. She translates from Spanish and Catalan, and received an NEA Translation Fellowship for her work on Rodoreda.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Open Letter
Country
United States
Date
10 November 2015
Pages
194
ISBN
9781940953229

Featured on Jeff VanderMeer’s Epic List of Favorite Books Read in 2015

Rodoreda had bedazzled me by the sensuality with which she reveals things within the atmosphere of her novels. -Gabriel Garcia Marquez

Rodoreda plumbs a sadness that reaches beyond historic circumstances … an almost voluptuous vulnerability. -Natasha Wimmer, The Nation

It is a total mystery to me why [Rodoreda] isn’t widely worshipped; along with Willa Cather, she’s on my list of authors whose works I intend to have read all of before I die. Tremendous, tremendous writer. -John Darnielle, The Mountain Goats

Despite its title, there is little of war and much of the fantastic in this coming-of-age story, which was the last novel Merce Rodoreda published during her lifetime.

We first meet its young protagonist, Adria Guinart, as he is leaving Barcelona out of boredom and a thirst for freedom, embarking on a long journey through the backwaters of a rural land that one can only suppose is Catalonia, accompanied by the interminable, distant rumblings of an indefinable war. In vignette-like chapters and with a narrative style imbued with the fantastic, Guinart meets with numerous adventures and peculiar characters who offer him a composite, if surrealistic, view of an impoverished, war-ravaged society and shape his perception of his place in the world.

As in Rodoreda’s Death in Spring, nature and death play an fundamental role in a narrative that often takes on a phantasmagoric quality and seems to be a meditation on the consequences of moral degradation and the inescapable presence of evil.

Merce Rodoreda (1908-1983) is widely regarded as the most important Catalan writer of the twentieth century. Exiled in France and Switzerland following the Spanish Civil War, Rodoreda began writing the novels and short stories-Twenty-Two Short Stories, The Time of the Doves, Camellia Street, Garden by the Sea-that would eventually make her internationally famous.

Maruxa Relano is a journalist and translator based in Barcelona. She has worked as a translator for The Wall Street Journal, a writer for NY1, and wrote articles for the

New York Daily News

, Newsday, and New York magazine, among other publications.

Martha Tennent was born in the U.S, but has lived most of her life in Barcelona where she served as founding dean of the School of Translation and Interpreting at the University of Vic. She translates from Spanish and Catalan, and received an NEA Translation Fellowship for her work on Rodoreda.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Open Letter
Country
United States
Date
10 November 2015
Pages
194
ISBN
9781940953229