Anatomy of a Moment
«‘A brilliant reconfiguring of a key event in contemporary European history. Audacious and wholly fascinating'»
William Boyd
In February 1981, just as Spain was finally leaving Franco's dictatorship and during the first democratic vote in parliament for a new prime minister - Colonel Tejero and a band of right-wing soldiers burst into the Spanish parliament and began firing shots. Les mer
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In The Anatomy of a Moment, Cercas examines a key moment in Spanish history, just as he did so successfully in his Spanish Civil War novel, Soldiers of Salamis. This is the only coup ever to have been caught on film as it was happening, which, as Cercas says, 'guaranteed both its reality and its unreality'. Every February a few seconds of the video are shown again and Spaniards congratulate themselves for standing up for democracy, but Cercas says that things were very quiet that afternoon and evening while all over Spain people stayed inside waiting for the coup to be defeated .... or to triumph.
Detaljer
- Forlag
- Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- Innbinding
- Paperback
- Språk
- Engelsk
- Sider
- 416
- ISBN
- 9781408822104
- Utgivelsesår
- 2012
- Format
- 20 x 13 cm
Anmeldelser
«‘A brilliant reconfiguring of a key event in contemporary European history. Audacious and wholly fascinating'»
William Boyd
«‘Persuasive, brilliant and absorbing'»
Economist
«‘An almost Shakespearean account of soldiers, politicians, mixed motives and the lust for power'»
Anne Chisholm, Sunday Telegraph
«Cercas is a master storyteller»
Independent
«A mesmerising achievement»
Literary Review
«Cercas forces us to abandon the fiction, the legend of the coup, and look at the pictures and story anew in all their complexity»
Michael Eaude, Independent
«‘Richly imagined, suspenseful and surprisingly poignant ... a reminder of how Spanish history might have taken a dramatically different turn that evening thirty years ago'»
Financial Times
«Always a nimble dancer on the edge of history and fiction, the Spanish writer returns with a closely researched but always dramatic account of the failed coup in 1981 that almost vanquished his country's fragile post-Franco democracy»
Boyd Tonkin, Independent