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Published in 1921, "Belarmino y Apolonio" probably is the best
novel written by the Spanish Asturias-born writer Ramon Perez de
Ayala, and certainly a most significant one among those published
during the so-called Spanish culture Silver Age (1898-1936).
According to the French hispanist critic Jean Cassou "Belarmino y
Apolonio" should be considered one of the most important novels in
Spanish literature, second only to "El Quijote." The novel appears
at first sight to be a story that could be classified as
"costumbrismo" or even romantic pulp fiction: the forbidden love
between a young seminarist and a beautiful girl, son and daughter
respectively of two shoemakers who happen to hate each other. But
in truth the work constitutes a singular mechanism of mirrors and
retelling, and a continuous pondering upon human behavior, up to
the point that the reader soon realizes that one of the cobblers is
a philosopher who happens to have invented a new language, and the
other one considers himself to be a playwright and normally speaks
in verse. With this novel Perez de Ayala presents a fictional
research on the point of view, the contrast and, finally, the
relativeness and contingency of human opinion, and how do these
affect the precious good called "happiness," in a text that
combines cultural references and an essay-like style with a precise
narrative structure, all encompassed in a playful and ironic tone
of voice.
Niebla is about the vicissitudes of Alberto Perez, a young, rich,
introspective and orphan man, who one days awakens to the belief
that he loves Eugenia, a young woman whom he casually walks by at
the street. The irruption of what Augusto understands as love marks
the start of the story, and is coincident with the moment in which
the character feels that he is starting his real existence, as
before this event he had lived in a lonely way, amidst his dreams
and childhood recalls, enfolded in his mother's memories. Thus his
struggle to achieve true love is right from the start inextricably
entwined with his worries about his own existence and its
development. The importance of Niebla in the Spanish and European
cultural movement of the first half of the XX Century is undeniable
and cannot be overstressed: it condensates and highlights the
central issues that surround existence, immortality and how to live
one's own life, all central aspects of author Miguel de Unamuno's
thoughts. Niebla also undermines the traditional rules of the genre
by using fresh narrative processes that achieve their apex with a
revolutionary usage of metafiction, while offering through
Augusto's story, and his efforts to seduce Eugenia, a gallery of
well rounded and complex characters that combine a variety of vital
attitudes and ways of understanding reality. In a rich and polished
language Niebla is, through direct, deep and touching complexity, a
great literary piece that throughout almost a hundred years has
kept us, its readers, wondering who we really are. This edition,
annotated and with a foreword by Juan Herrero-Senes, is a great
reading for courses dealing with Modernism.
Benjamin Jarnes (1888-1949) stands at the center of the avant garde
Spanish novel, with near ten hybrid fiction, critique and
autobiographical works. Escenas junto a la muerte, originally
released in 1931, is a most illustrative example of modern
narrative, and may be placed along the best literary examples of
the genre (Proust, Joyce, Musil, Dos Passos or Giradoux). The novel
starts with its main character, a young Literature aspiring
professor, already decided to commit suicide. Stopped by a friend,
and asked about the reasons for this dramatic decision, the young
professor explains his story. The successive chapters constitute a
flashback on his diverse misfortunes, that may be characterized as
those of a modern Don Juan who sees reality through the eyes of
literary myths. Even today Escenas junto a la muerte stands
thoroughly modern due to its provoking writing, its transformation
and reuse of literary historical tropes and themes, its vigorous
advocacy for a full experience of present without bondage to
memories from the past, and its firm support of literature as a
subtle and unique knowledge experience. This novel, as many of
Jarnes', makes for a joyful reading. Its prose constitutes a
rhythmic, precise, crystal clear experience, studded with
surprising metaphors and carefully crafted aesthetics imagery.
Prof. Juan Herrero-Senes' foreword sets a clear and explanatory
background for the novel, that complement the footnotes to assure
the modern reader a full experience of the extraordinary Jarnes
modern narrative.
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