The 3 best books by Antonio Gómez Rufo

Gomez Rufo He is the perfect wardrobe author, a modern classic with more than 40 years of work and countless published books including novels, volumes of short stories, scripts, essays, plays. The typical (or rather atypical) all-rounder of the creative capable of tackling with fascinating ease any new idea offered briefly by the muses.

Beyond current genres capable of replicating like a virus due to its plot facility (to a good understanding, few words are enough), Antonio is undoubtedly one of the most prolific Spanish storytellers. His novels alternate historical fiction with existentialist arguments, chronic realism, adventures or even mystery and suspense. So we can always rediscover unexpected facets in his pen.

Dedicated for more than twenty years and practically exclusively to his literary side, Antonio is therefore an essential writer of our time. A bulwark of good, hard-earned literature from creative genius.

Top 3 recommended novels by Antonio Gómez Rufo

Madrid

Boldness makes more sense when the person who manifests it is a great reference in the matter. Writing a novel with Madrid as the protagonist has much of an unattainable claim, but Gómez Rufo's literature is presented in the same practically unattainable way.

In the same way that Edward rutherfurd He wrote his novels about London or Paris, among others, Antonio Gómez Rufo picks up the glove and presents Madrid as it was, as it came to be what it is. In the meantime, the exciting course of life, its imprint and the beautiful composition resulting from the tragic and the magical. This is the great novel of Madrid. His story, his epic, his everyday life. Belonging to everyone, Madrid never belonged to anyone. Hence his greatness and simplicity, his pride and humility, his revolutionary character and his dignity.

Through three exciting family sagas, Antonio Gómez Rufo traces the exciting literary story of Madrid, from one morning in 1565 when the young Juan Posada, Alonso Vázquez and Guzmán de Tarazona crossed the old Puerta del Sol for the first time ready to try their luck in Villa y Corte, until the attacks of March 2004, XNUMX, when the tragedy strikes once again the heart of one of the most beautiful cities in the world.People pass by, stories end, and rivers fall and subside before drowning in the sea; but the cities remain and their history does not stop in its slow journey towards eternity.

Madrid, the novel

The night of the tamarind

One of those stories that break the usual trend of this author to present us with an enigmatic plot, captivating in its way of bringing together the fantastic with the transcendental. It is not that it is a science fiction novel and yet it does adopt similar dilemmas, such as projections of our imagination to cut off conceptions about life, death, memories and immortality from consciousness.

Can money buy more life today? Would you save your child's life at the cost of the death of other children? Is love still the best refuge for human beings? Why don't governments allow Science to advance in curing deadly diseases? When a terrible disease takes the life of his only daughter, Vinicio Salazar, one of the richest men in the world, will face the greatest crossroads that fate has subjected to any mortal: to fake his own death and use his fortune and power with it. sole objective of achieving the prolongation of life beyond what was conceived until then by any human being.

If he managed to avoid death and stop biological aging, he could venerate the memory of his dead daughter, however ... What would be the true purpose of his search?

The night of the tamarind

The language of memories

The unfortunate memories of the losers of a war spread like a stain of ignominy and oblivion. Everything after the defeat, which came after Madrid surrendered in 39, meant that anyone who occupied the opposite side was stripped of everything.

The blows of the Spanish civil war lasted for many years afterwards. That is why a memory such as the final loss of Madrid can be desperately heavy as well as tragic. This novel is a nostalgic look at history and life, a tribute to Literature with capital letters, and a reflection on the memories that return to us when everything seems lost.

“Madrid had to be eternal again, and all the surviving Madrilenians gave themselves up to that; and those who allowed them to survive. Madrid, always epic, became a defeated city; and, after the defeat, many Madrilenians wept with rage and impotence. It was the time of the end of the war and the beginning of my love for Elena. "A man in the twilight of his life spends one last summer in front of the sea. During those lonely days, he remembers that other summer in which his life changed forever: that of 1939. It was in the months following the entry of the national troops into Madrid, in a defeated city that desperately struggled to re-open itself to the life, when the protagonist - then a teenage brother of a high-ranking Falange officer - fell in love with the daughter of a shot anarchist ...

The language of memories
5/5 - (14 votes)

2 comments on "The 3 best books by Antonio Gómez Rufo"

  1. Good night. Mr Antonio G Rufo
    Almost 20 years ago we met by chance. Whenever I have the opportunity to talk with friends I do not stop recommending him as a great writer...in addition to his Human warmth.
    It is very likely that in 6 to 8 months he will travel to Madrid to visit some friends. For me it would be a pleasure to have a librarian talk... through an espresso

    Reply

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