Walking the Lions

Walking the Lions

by StephenBurgen (Author)

Synopsis

When Alex Nadal unexpectedly inherits his aunt's farm near Barcelona he has two problems, the first being that he is a piano player from New York with no knowledge of matters agricultural, and secondly, his aunt appears to have died twice: once at the end of the Spanish Civil War - or so Alex's father had always led him to believe - and again sixty years later, from a mysterious fall. Very soon after landing on Spanish soil it soon becomes apparent that Alex's is not a prodigal's return. From the moment he steps off the plane he is under pressure to go back to where he came from, but Alex is not a quitter and to him any problem can be solved if people are willing to discuss it. And sure enough, people are happy to talk - but not about Alex's immediate problem: anything but that. It gradually dawns on Alex that he is in the way of something but when he tries to find out what that is the answer is always the same: don't ask, let sleeping dogs lie. But Alex will not be put off and his persistence brings him up against some of the most powerful forces in the country, including Salvador Oriol, the uncrowned king of Catalonia, and his nephew Narcis, a sharply-dressed thug with a talent for violence. Yet Alex is not without allies, among them Carmen, the dark-eyed arts correspondent of the Barcelona daily, who seems heaven-sent. On the other hand there is Angel, doyen of hustlers and Carmen's exlover, who most certainly isn't. Together Alex and Carmen unearth a dossier of explosive information on events which happened in 1938 that forced his father to flee the family farm and in trying to find out why, Alex discovers that this is a country where there is no such thing as the past but a place where there is only unfinished business.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Constable
Published: 30 May 2002

ISBN 10: 1841194484
ISBN 13: 9781841194486

Media Reviews
Alex Nadal's life is in uproar. His father has committed suicide and then he discovers he's inherited a farm just outside Barcelona. His benefactor is an aunt who appears to have died twice: once at the end of the Spanish Civil War, according to his father, and then again a few months previously, according to her death certificate. Arriving in Spain to try and figure out what to do with his inheritance - he's a musician, after all, not a farmer - Alex finds that he's an unwanted pawn in a chess game that mixes high finance with low politics, murder and corruption. He also discovers that long memories breed bitter offspring and that the truth isn't a shield when rich men might fall because of it. Fast-paced and atmospheric - a strong debut.
Author Bio
Stephen Burgen was born in Montreal but has lived in London for most of his life. He now lives in Barcelona where he reports on Spain for The Times. He has written numerous articles for The Guardian, Independent and magazines and in 1996 his first book, Your Mother's Tongue: a Book of European Invective, was published by Gollancz. Walking the Lions is his first novel.