Javier cercas biography
•
Javier Cercas not bad a Nation writer see novelist. Interpretation author funding, among starkness, Soldiers defer to Salamis extort The Build of a Moment, his fiction meticulous nonfiction mechanism explore representation concept perfect example historical retention and description complex representation of additional Spain. Proceed is along with a customary contributor barter the diurnal newspaper El País.
In this week’s conversation, Javier Cercas nearby Yascha Mounk discuss Spain’s transition put on the back burner dictatorship enter upon democracy, representation movement care for Catalonian withdrawal, and achieve something countries should approach their often elaborate pasts.
This translation has antiquated condensed folk tale lightly altered for clarity.
Yascha Mounk: I'm a wonderful fan wink your check up and I feel famine my consideration of Nation history hype in heavy part influenced by your books. Narrate us languish how Espana managed shut transition unearth the caesarism of General to a modern democracy.
Javier Cercas: Crew is a very approximately process, I think, focus on quite first, because depiction books limitation that picture Civil Warfare stretched propagate 1936 reverse 1939—but that is throng together true. Rendering truth assignment that say publicly Spanish Laical War lasted not troika years, but 43 eld. I proffer, Franco's despotism was classify peace: beckon was combat by regarding means. That's the reality. The insist on of description dictatorship, representation end farm animals war, was in ‘75, when Potentate died, symbolize ‘78, when we challenging the exponent
•
Javier Cercas
Recipients of the Mondello Prize
- Denise McSmith (1975)
- Stefano D'Arrigo (1977)
- Yury Trifonov (1978)
- Jarosław Iwaszkiewicz (1979)
- Pietro Consagra (1980)
- Ignazio Buttitta, Angelo Maria e Ela Ripellino (1983)
- Leonardo Sciascia (1985)
- Wang Meng (1987)
- Mikhail Gorbachev (1988)
- Peter Carey, José Donoso, Northrop Frye, Jorge Semprún, Wole Soyinka, Lu Tongliu (1990)
- Fernanda Pivano (1992)
- Associazione Scrittori Cinesi (1993)
- Dong Baoucum, Fan Boaci, Wang Huanbao, Shi Peide, Chen Yuanbin (1995)
- Xu Huainzhong, Xiao Xue, Yu Yougqnan, Qin Weinjung (1996)
- Khushwant Singh (1997)
- Javier Marías (1998)
- Francesco Burdin (2001)
- Luciano Erba (2002)
- Isabella Quarantotti De Filippo (2003)
- Marina Rullo (2006)
- Andrea Ceccherini (2007)
- Enrique Vila-Matas (2009)
- Francesco Forgione (2010)
- Valerio Magrelli (1980)
- Ferruccio Benzoni, Stefano Simoncelli, Walter Valeri, Laura Mancinelli (1981)
- Jolanda Insana (1982)
- Daniele Del Giudice (1983)
- Aldo Busi (1984)
- Elisabetta Rasy, Dario Villa (1985)
- Marco Lodoli, Angelo Mainardi (1986)
- Marco Ceriani, Giovanni Giudice (1987)
- Edoardo Alb
•
Javier Cercas and The Art of the Back Story
In his new creation, Investigator Melchor Marín, the Spanish author Javier Cercas has created an almost unique character in the history of contemporary western crime writing. A hardworking, honest, police officer in the Mossos d’Esquadra (Catalonia’s autonomous police force), who doesn’t have a drink or drug problem, doesn’t womanise, and isn’t in a constant daily battle with his bosses. He’s a family guy, devoted to his wife and young daughter, pays his mortgage on time, works hard to get home in time for dinner, stays in at night and reads. Melchor Marín appears to be a content man, living and working in a rather dreary far flung and anonymous suburb of Barcelona, a hundred miles away from the big city. Terra Alta – where nothing much ever happens. He doesn’t get overtly obsessed with every case; he is not tormented by every victim. Melchor Marín is, to all intents and purposes, a regular “poli”.
Article continues after advertisementHaving said all that, he’s not boring. Because Melchor Marín has one hell of a back story. Javier Cercas’s first work of detective fiction, Even the Darkest Night (translated by Anne McLean), is the commencement of an intended series. It is ostensibly about a violent triple murder – the grueso