The Forging of a Rebel - Softcover

Barea, Arturo; Barea, Ilsa; Townson, Nigel

 
9780802776150: The Forging of a Rebel

Synopsis

Originally published in the late 1940s, and never before available in paperback in the United States, Arturo Barea's astonishing Spanish trilogy is both the autobiography of a man and the biography of a nation during the first four decades of the twentieth century, one of the most crucial periods in Spain's long history.

Arturo Barea was born into a poor family in Madrid in 1897 and spent his early years moving between the social and economic worlds of his beloved and widowed mother and a well-to-do aunt. Spain had just lost the last of its rich colonial possessions and was burdened by a sick and corrupt monarchy, and Barea's description of Madrid in The Forge-its slums and boulevards, beggars and children, and conflicting economic and political currents, is as gripping as it is fascinating. As with many of his generation, he developed bourgeois yearnings and became a prosperous businessman; yet he also became deeply concerned about the greed, corruption, and injustice he saw around him. His experience in the Spanish Army in Morocco during the bloody Riff War of the early 1920s, chronicled in The Track, affected him deeply and brought him back to Spain with a new perspective. The Clash jumps ahead a decade to chronicle the events in Madrid during the Spanish Civil War, from 1935 to 1939, when Barea and his wife, Ilsa, left Spain for good. His descriptions of people rising up to resist their aggressors are unforgettable, and brings home more poignantly and insightfully than any history the underlying conflicts, tensions, and complexities of the Civil War.

Individually, each of Barea's books is unforgettable; together they form a literary and historical masterpiece.

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.

Review

'This is an exceptional book' -- George Orwell

'One of the great autobiographies of the twentieth century' -- New Republic

'The Forging of a Rebel is as essential to an understanding of twentieth-century Spain as the reading of Tolstoy is indispensable to the comprehension of nineteenth-century Russia' --Daily Telegraph

'One of the most significant Spanish prose works of [the 20th] century... Moving and dramatic' -- New York Review of Books

'Perhaps the most definitive and personal account of [Spain's] history during the first four decades of the 20th century' --Guardian

'One of the best novels written in Spanish' --Gabriel García Márquez

About the Author

Arturo Barea (1897-1957) was for most of the Spanish Civil War head of the Foreign Press and Censorship Bureau of the Republican Government in Madrid and was also the radio broadcaster who became internationally famous as the 'Unknown Voice of Madrid'. Eventually forced out of Spain, he sought temporary asylum in France before crossing to England just before the outbreak of World War II.

"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.

Other Popular Editions of the Same Title