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Treasure of the Spanish Civil War

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
An intimate portrait of childhood during Spain's violent fascist regime, rendered in a surreal kaleidoscope of linked stories.
Serge Pey's stories are lyrical, vivid vignettes of life during and directly following Spain's violent fascist regime of the thirties and forties. The collection is a defiant ode to the resilience of the human spirit, each story depicting a small act of human resistance: a man plants a fruit tree for each of his assassinated comrades; a professor hides a secret library of banned books in plain sight. Many of the stories are surreal, fable-like impressions from the perspective of children caught in the midst of the political violence. Pey's understated yet unusual prose renders a brutal landscape with childlike wonder. The Treasure of the Spanish Civil War and Other Tales is a strikingly original meditation on courage, survival, and hope in the face of oppression. 
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from January 20, 2020
      Pey’s haunting, inspired collection (after Flamenco) captures the lives of refugees fleeing the Spanish Civil War. Set mostly in France, where fleeing Spanish anarchists and their families were put in internment camps by the French government, the stories feature characters who demonstrate resilience and resistance. In the harrowing “The Piece of Wood,” a refugee camp director tortures children for information and punishes prisoners by locking them in oil drums, which “often became coffins.” Friends Floridor and Chucho of “Morse Code” tap out chess moves to one another on the pipes in their cells, “a kind of tom-tom of hope from invisible and occult constellations.” In “The Movies,” a refugee family is “the poorest of the poor,” but the children “learn to read French” by watching subtitled American movies projected outdoors. And in the standout title story, set in 1958 Toulouse, exiles and their families are brought together in celebration by a quixotic hunt for buried gold. Throughout this remarkable collection, Pey’s startling and memorable images have a poetic logic, building complexity and nuance into the characters’ cries for freedom. This masterful collection stands with the best fiction about war refugees.

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  • English

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