3 best books by Antonia Romero

The writer Antonia romero is a singular author who borders on different bestseller genres with the same solvency. From suggestive mysteries, very well worked with that precise research base, to more pink plots, youth novels or other types of self-help.

But it is in its aspect of mystery genre where the writer steps firmer and where she gets more and more readers to join her narrative proposals.

Arriving in the literary world with the insolence and current self-confidence of the indie author, she has also been rescued by major publishing labels.

Considering her ability to offer us new novels with magic and short cadence, Antonia Romero is already a notable novelist on the national literary scene.

Top 3 recommended novels by Antonia Romero

The shared grave

The fascination with Ancient Egypt has turned writers around the world head over heels. In Spain we were in Jose Luis Sampedro or in Terenci moix (to cite two very well known in the narrative set in that splendorous past Egypt) and we still discover in other current ones such as Nacho Ares stories that abound at that point between mythical and esoteric on the banks of the Nile, with more or less informative intent.

On this occasion Antonia achieved great success with a plot of adventures and large doses of intrigue around a heart-shaped amulet that soon connects us with its origin in ancient Egypt.

Maite is an antiquarian dedicated to her work, also as a way to escape from her harsh family reality. The discovery of the mysterious and precious heart-shaped amulet launches her on the adventure of her life, with that notion of searching for herself beyond her hiding place among old relics.

Together with his partner and advised by an archaeologist, the three prepare a trip to Egypt in order to find the answers that the amulet poses as a complete and disturbing question. Everything points to Nefertiti, Akhenaten's wife. Only, evidently, as they get closer to solving the eerie mystery, dangers will begin to lurk at risk to their own lives.

The Shared Tomb, by Antonia Romero

The dead don't accept questions

In the movie The Sixth Sense it was once again crystal clear to us that the dead with whom we can connect are those who are still in that limbo of unfinished business.

Nela has that ability to contact those who pass through that dimension. From her childhood she always knew that she was special because only she was able to converse with beings that no longer inhabited this world.

That or maybe his bad childhood days came to fruition in a connection between the insane and the extrasensory. Guardian angels perhaps, the point is that if Nela has been able to survive an ominous father and an indifferent mother, it is more than likely that it was thanks to them, the dead.

Nela as the mission of the inhabitants of the parallel world. And Nela as the great mystery that sustains the plot. Because little by little we discover the dark motives that have been conspired against him since childhood.

Around a precious scenography that provides a point of telluric magnetism from which Nela's strange companions seem to emerge, we accompany a protagonist in her particular evolution towards the unveiled end of everything, that last page in which emotions soar and fantasy overcomes fears, opening up new great opportunities to live.
The dead don't accept questions

The missing piece

A story that marks that point and apart in the author's bibliography. A very lively story with an undeniable romantic point and a plot that revolves around a brilliant character like Eva. Because it is Eva who makes everything change in the life of the rich Carmen Grimaldos. And by extension also the life of Ander, his partner and stepson.

But the contact between Eva and Carmen awakens in Carmen an underground plan. The millionaire knows how to discover something very special in Eva and ends up putting her at the controls of some of her businesses shared with Ander.

What begins as a friction towards an environment that reinforces old resentments and suspicions, ends up opening up to a new scenario in which Eva, as a good nurse by profession, can end up healing in the most unexpected way.

The missing piece, by Antonia Romero
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