Dear girl, by Edith Olivier

book-dear-girl

Loneliness had an easy solution in childhood. In fact, it never got to be complete loneliness. The imagination could reconstruct the moment and by extension, the world. The imaginary friend was an absolutely condescending guy with your games and your ideas. Someone to entrust your entire existence with the ...

Continue reading

The Warning of the Crows, by Raquel Villaamil

book-the-warning-of-crows

There are books that beat me for the cover. A cover says a lot. It may already be because you find it simply beautiful, curious or shocking. Or because it is one of those that keeps you enthralled by its intriguing details, its color or whatever it is that captivates you indefinitely. ...

Continue reading

The man in the black suit, from Stephen King

book-the-man-in-black-suit

It never hurts to recover the king of kings of modern literature. Himself Stephen King. The labels of the writer of horror novels, which have always been placed on the great American author, are conveniently unstitched by good lovers of literature who know how to discover art ...

Continue reading

The Many Worlds Theory, by Christopher Edge

book-the-theory-of-many-worlds

When science fiction is transformed into a stage where emotions, existential doubts, transcendent questions or even deep uncertainties are represented, the result acquires a magically real tone in its most finalist interpretation. If, in addition, the whole of the work knows how to imbue the story with humor, it can be said that we ...

Continue reading

Three dwarfs and a peak, by Ángel Sanchidrián

book-three-dwarfs-and-peak

Humor is the best remedy for boiling blood, heartburn and the brutal indigestion of social and political reality. But I think that we are so up to the very end of such a ilk that surrounds us, that in the end this book Three Dwarfs and a Peak is over ...

Continue reading

Surrender, by Ray Loriga

novel-surrender

Alfaguara Novel Prize 2017 The transparent city to which the characters in this story arrive is the metaphor of so many dystopias that many other writers have imagined in light of the adverse circumstances that have occurred throughout history. Such ...

Continue reading

The Bohemian Astronaut, by Jaroslav Kalfar

bohemian-astronaut-book

Lost in Space. That must be the best situation to do introspection and really discover how tiny the existence is, or the greatness of that very existence that has led you there, to a vast cosmos like nothing dotted with stars. The world is a memory ...

Continue reading

The tigress and the acrobat, by Susanna Tamaro

book-The-tigress-and-the-acrobat

I have always liked fables. We all begin to know them in childhood and rediscover them in adulthood. That possible double reading turns out to be just lovely. From The Little Prince to Rebellion on the Farm to bestsellers like Life of Pi. The simple-looking stories in your fantasy ...

Continue reading

The metamorphosis, by Kafka

book-the-metamorphosis

We are all a little Gregory samsa when, upon waking, we spend a few seconds doubting everything around us. The difference between the strange case of Gregorio Samsa and our morning awakenings is that he has finally been able to access the ultimate reality.

You can now buy The Metamorphosis, Kafka's masterpiece, here:

Metamorphosis