Full Description
Barcelona is one of the most visited cities in Europe, a multilingual capital of an autonomous region that longs to be independent of Spain. The city is famous for its painters, modernist architecture, style of football, and its history, but as Peter Bush reveals it has always been a major centre of literary talent and creativity. Barcelona Tales presents a selection of newly translated short stories by 14 writers, many of them Catalan. The stories explore the themes of migration and class conflict in a city renowned in world literature from the day rural innocents Don Quixote and Sancho Panza visited its streets at the beginning of the seventeenth-century, and witnessed the wonders of the printing press and the cruelties of slavery. Together, they open up the city in ironic, tragic, and lyrical ways, inviting readers to explore fictional lives and literary styles that reflect the dynamic, conflict-ridden character and history of this great European city.
Contents
General Introduction, Helen Constantine
Introduction, Peter Bush
1. What happened to Don Quixote when he went to Barcelona?, Miguel de Cervantes
2. Transplanted, Narcís Oller
3. A Brief, Heart-warming Story of a Madame Bovary Born and Bred in Gràcia, Following our Best Principles and Traditions, Montserrat Roig
4. Ramon from Montjuic, Josep Pla
5. Blitz on Barcelona, C.A. Jordana
6. A Detective Story, Juan Marsé
7. Three Steps, Miquel Molina
8. Dead Time, Teresa Solana
9. The Shoe-shine and La Locomotora, Alfredo Bryce Echenique
10. Neighbours, Jordi Nopca
11. Which Country Do You Want?, Empar Moliner
12. The Sound of Keys, Najat El Hachmi
13. The Boy who was Sure to Die, Quim Monzó
14. Julio, the Parrot and the Taxi Driver, Jorge Carrión
Notes on the Authors
Further Reading and Viewing
Publisher's Acknowledgements
Map