Carpenter's Pencil

Carpenter's Pencil

by Manuel Rivas (Author), Manuel Rivas (Author), Jonathan Dunne (Translator)

Synopsis

It is the summer of 1936, the early months of the agonising civil war that engulfs Spain and shakes the rest of the world. In a prison in the pilgrim city of Santiago de Compostela, an artist sketches the famous porch of the cathedral, the Portico da Gloria. He uses a carpenter's pencil. But instead of reproducing the sculptured faces of the prophets and elders, he draws the faces of his fellow Republican prisoners. Many years later in post-Franco Spain, a survivor of that period, Doctor Daniel da Barca, returns from exile to his native Galicia, and the threads of past memories begin to be woven together. This poetic and moving novel conveys the horror and savagery of the tragedy that divided Spain, and the experiences of the men and women who lived through it. Yet in the process, it also relates one of the most beautiful love stories imaginable.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 176
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Vintage
Published: 02 Jan 2003

ISBN 10: 0099448467
ISBN 13: 9780099448464
Book Overview: 'A beautiful novel, full of humanity and tenderness' Arturo Perez-Reverte

Media Reviews
A startling novel. I have rarely read a piece of writing so poetic * Daily Telegraph *
He is an important storyteller because he is sensitive and he has an incredible ear, which, in his fiction, is allied to great ingenuity -- John Berger
I learnt more about the Spanish Civil War from The Carpenter's Pencil...than from any history book I've read -- Gunter Grass
Author Bio
Manuel Rivas was born in A Coruna in 1957. He writes in the Galician language of north-west Spain. He is well known in Spain for his journalism, as well as for his prize-winning short stories and novels, which include the internationally acclaimed The Carpenter's Pencil and Books Burn Badly. His most recent novel, All is Silence, will be published in English in 2013. His works have been translated into twenty languages.