3 Best books by Inma Chacón

No tribute better than the one it provides Inma Chacón to his sister Dulce. Because in that special bond that always unites twin brothers, Inma's emergence as a writer undoubtedly draws on the legacy of the now-defunct Dulce.

And yet the thematic distance of the works marks that imprint of each one of them. In the case of Inma, whom we are bringing to this space today, her marked versatility makes her cope with ease in varied arguments that as soon as they enter historical fiction as they address current stories or even juvenile plots.

An all-terrain author who takes advantage of any story that comes her way, with the intensity of vivid characters wherever the disparate scenes call for them, from a nineteenth-century setting full of melancholy but also feminist vindication, to a current scenario as a reflection of circumstances exported from the reality of our world.

But also a writer who knows how to maintain the necessary rhythm of a good bestseller book, with timely use of the mysteries understood in its broadest consideration.

3 best novels by Inma Chacón:

As long as I can think of you

Perhaps it is because it was the first novel that I found that addressed the theme of stolen children. That macabre procedure extended for decades in Spain by which children were separated from their mothers to hand them over to third parties, under the excuse of death during childbirth.

So, embarking on the story from the prism of the discovery of the son who is not such, and of his search for biological origins 40 years later, Carlos's adventures gave the plot maximum emotional intensity. Except that the passage of time in deprivation of the truth is only an anesthetic for Carlos, while for the adolescent who never believed in the death of her son, it is the same time marked by mistrust and remote longing.

As long as I can think of you
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Sand time

The seal of the Planeta award (finalist in this case) gives any work that quality mark at the discretion of the guild's judges. And the truth is that this novel has that noséqué of a great plot between the tragic, the mystery and the charm of that recent past that is the nineteenth century leaning towards modernity but still indebted to the dark times of our civilization.

And between these two lands this novel moves at the foot of the bed of a woman, María Francisca, in whose enigmatic life (surely forced from within to be able to live as a free woman), she was leaving her mark in the shadows of the social awareness. Her children, unknown to the people around them, then become the protagonists of a particular legacy full of mysteries, of disturbing links consciously linked by the surprising María Francisca. With a feminist claim point that reminds us that not so long ago that women were nothing, the magical dynamism of the plot leaves no room for rest towards a fascinating ending.

Sand time
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Indian princess

Inma's first novel and a whole plot of fascinating historical fiction that moves on both shores of the Atlantic, between imperial Spain in full expansion and America that appeared plus ultra of a Europe that could never imagine what was pending to unite after the meeting of the two worlds.

With the protagonism of Hernán Cortés, but above all with the brilliance of a captivating character of the young Aztec who moves between both continents with the purity of her race made magnetic power. No better romantic example to delve into the miscegenation of cultures that the discovery caused. Few stories so charming with their romantic side adorned by mystical sensations of ancient civilizations.

Indian princess
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5/5 - (10 votes)

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