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Manuel Rivas

Author of The Carpenter's Pencil

60+ Works 1,816 Members 71 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Manuel Rivas. Photo by Santos-Díez (Ollo de Vidro-ACAB).

Works by Manuel Rivas

The Carpenter's Pencil (2001) 499 copies
Books Burn Badly (2006) 241 copies
The Last Days of Terranova (2022) 90 copies
Ella, maldita alma (1999) 83 copies
All is silence (2010) 78 copies
In the Wilderness (1994) 75 copies
Las llamadas perdidas (2002) 64 copies
Las voces bajas (2008) 39 copies
La lingua delle farfalle (1998) 36 copies
Mujer en el baño (1901) 34 copies
Un millón de vacas (1989) 27 copies
Os comedores de patacas (1991) 17 copies
El pueblo de la noche (1996) 16 copies
Galicia, Galicia (2001) 16 copies
Bala Perdida (1998) — Author — 15 copies
El secreto de la tierra (1999) 13 copies
El héroe (Spanish Edition) (2005) 10 copies
A cuerpo abierto (2008) 9 copies
Vicente Ferrer (2013) 7 copies
A desaparición da neve (2009) 7 copies
Cuentos de un invierno (2005) 5 copies
O raposo e a mestra (2013) 5 copies
Costa da morte blues (1995) 5 copies
Todo ben (1985) 3 copies
Milu (2010) 3 copies
A nena lectora (2021) 2 copies
El zorro y la maestra (2014) 2 copies
Contos de Nadal (2005) 2 copies
Nosotros dos (2002) 1 copy
A boca da terra (2015) 1 copy
Alma, maldita alma (2000) 1 copy
Ningún cisne (1990) 1 copy

Associated Works

Fariña (2015) — Foreword, some editions — 91 copies
Relato contemporáneo. 1 (2007) — Contributor — 3 copies
O relato breve : escolma dunha década, 1980-1990 (1990) — Contributor — 3 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1957-10-24
Gender
male
Nationality
Spain
Birthplace
A Coruna, Galicia, Spain
Places of residence
A Coruña, Galicia, Spain
Organizations
Greenpeace
Awards and honors
Premio Nacional de Narrativa 1996

Members

Reviews

Las llamadas perdidas
Manuel Rivas
Publicado: 2002 | 129 páginas
Relato Realista

Los relatos de Las llamadas perdidas se rebelan contra la fatalidad, se hacen fuertes con su brizna de esperanza, con sus puñetazos de humor e ironía. Como cuando las paredes oyen a los amantes, «¡Así, más, más, más!», esta nueva obra del autor de La lengua de las mariposas y El lápiz del carpintero no huye de la realidad sino que reclama más y más: ¡Más realidad! La memoria viaja sobre los hombros del lenguaje. Los recuerdos aquí no son pasado, son una reconstrucción de la vida por medio de las sensaciones y de una mirada táctil.
El impacto de las pérdidas hace tambalear la existencia cotidiana. Esa excitación, ese levantarse en la caída, es el punto de partida de este libro emocionante. Estamos ante un realismo íntimo , donde golpean a puñetazos la conmoción y la sorpresa, pero que rechaza la convención de lo mágico como etiqueta limitadora. Al contrario, reclama más realidades: la que se oculta, esconde o se disfraza. La literatura viene siendo nuestra intrahistoria, y el camino que aquí va abriendo la escritura es un paso clandestino, con tramos inquietantes, que nos conduce al paisaje de la emoción. Pero son relatos, los de Las llamadas perdidas , que se rebelan contra la fatalidad. En ellos surgen siempre personajes que luchan, cuerpo a cuerpo, contra la adversidad y la tristeza. Se hacen fuertes con su brizna de esperanza, con sus puñetazos de humor e ironía.
… (more)
 
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libreriarofer | 1 other review | Feb 17, 2024 |
Ella, maldita alma
Manuel Rivas
Publicado: 2010 | 83 páginas
Relato Otros

¿Puede refugiarse el alma en una barra de pan? ¿O tener la forma de una guitarra eléctrica llamada Sirena en manos de un joven pescador? Desde la antigüedad, la búsqueda más intensa del ser humano es la del lugar donde habita el alma. He aquí una respuesta actual, sencilla, irónica y sorprendente a ese gran enigma histórico. El resultado de un duro viaje de ida y vuelta a las entrañas. Cada relato de esta nueva colección está protagonizado por las diferentes formas que puede adquirir el alma: ya sea una barra de pan, un loro, un enjambre de abejas o una guitarra eléctrica. Con esta nueva colección de relatos Manuel Rivas regresa al género que le ha hecho merecedor del Premio de la Crítica por Un millón de vacas y el Torrente Ballester y el Nacional de Literatura por ¿Qué me quieres, amor?… (more)
 
Flagged
libreriarofer | Feb 17, 2024 |
“I can picture the eyes poring over the last of the books, weighing their value, their health, color, musculature, and the state of their spines, meanwhile the books are in a state of shock as they feel the ground vanish out from under them.”

The Last Days of Terranova by Manuel Rivas (translated by Jacob Rogers) revolves around a family-owned bookstore in Galicia, Spain that is facing closure and the property to be handed over to real estate developers. As the story begins, we meet Vicenzo Fontana in 2014 as he broods over the imminent closure of The Terranova Bookstore, that has been in his family for decades, the fruition of his mother Comba’s dream to own her bookstore - the plans for which started taking shape in 1935. Her father, Vincenzo’s grandfather, worked very hard, in his lifetime, to make her dreams come true. Finally in 1946, she opened the store, marrying her husband Amaro the following year.

The story of the Terranova Bookstore and its owners is inextricably linked to the changing political and social landscape of the country and the surrounding region and moves through the years of the Francoist regime and the censorship of literature and the exile of intellectuals through the years to the democratic transition in the 1970s and the present day plagued by failing local independent businesses and economic recession. The narrative moves back and forth between various points of time in the past and the present day.

Vicenzo is dejected as he prepares for the liquidation of his inventory. He spends the last few days in his store with his dog, a few of the family's long time employees (who are more like family than staff) , and a new friend who has turned to him for help. As he prepares for the closure of the store and his imminent eviction from the property his memories take him back to the people and the events that have shaped his life.

“What did it matter if one bookstore closed, when so many other shops were closing too? A hole, an empty space, another hole. Emptiness grows, but due to its nature no one notices its reign until they find themselves trapped inside it. The eviction of souls, the cheapening of the imagination, the loss of oxygen.”

Vincenzo’s father, Amaro, a scholar of classical languages known for his passion for Homer’s Odyssey and a member of the Seminary of Galician Studies, loses his teaching job during the regime and devotes his time to the bookstore and writing articles under the pseudonym “Polytropos”, hosting intellectuals and facilitating debates and discussions and along with Vincenzo's Uncle Eliseo, facilitates the smuggling of banned books by emigrants and travelers in false bottomed suitcases across the seas and borders. They earn the reputation of a “banned book provider", acquiring books written by authors in exile and translations of international works banned in Francoist Spain,
braving inquiries, interrogations, informants and targeted raids through the years. Vincenzo, having suffered from polio and undergone a long, painful treatment using Iron Lung apparatus in the Marine Sanitarium as a child, found comfort among the shelves of the bookstore where his love for books and reading was nurtured. He also dreamed of leaving Galicia and did spend some of his early adult years in Madrid, returning with his friend Garua, an Argentinian revolutionary on the run, when it becomes unsafe for them to remain in Madrid in the aftermath of General Franco’s demise in the mid-1970s, gradually becoming more involved with the store.

The vivid descriptions of the bookstore with its owners and their friends, family and patrons, the historical backdrop and the numerous literary references make for an absorbing read. It does take a bit of effort to get used to the jumping timelines. Though we meet several characters whose stories are interwoven throughout the novel, nowhere did I feel that the author digressed from the main narrative and I did not lose interest at any point. With its beautiful prose and nostalgic tone, superb characterizations and relevant themes, this is an immersive and thought-provoking read that not only highlights the role of bookstores, books and literature in the lives of those who find comfort and solace in reading but also emphasizes the power of the written word in preserving history and instigating change and advancement of society as a whole. This was my first time reading Manuel Rivas and I was not disappointed!

“The link between a person’s life and what they like to read is unpredictable. According to the saying, we are what we read. But it could just as easily be said that we are what we don’t read.”

Many thanks to Archipelago Books and NetGalley for the digital review copy of this novel. All opinions expressed in this review are my own. This book is due to be released on October 11. 2022.
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1 vote
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srms.reads | 6 other reviews | Sep 4, 2023 |
 
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archivomorero | 8 other reviews | Nov 9, 2022 |

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Statistics

Works
60
Also by
3
Members
1,816
Popularity
#14,159
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
71
ISBNs
243
Languages
16
Favorited
2

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