Saira has never liked the way she looks. She is blonde, has blue eyes and everyone calls her Kharami, that is to say bastard. She lives in Afghanistan with her sister, mother and grandfather, and believes herself to be eight years old.
What if it were possible to recognise every corrupt politician, police officer or business person by an indelible mark on the face?
This novel tells of the relationship between a young councillor from Cádiz, brilliant, combative and spirited, and an older writer from Madrid, apparently calm and with as few illusions as prejudices.
Irene was a happy child, in the only way a child could be happy during that period, scarred by war, poverty and fear.
After an accident, Julia lies in suspense between a dream world and reality and only her instinct for survival will be able to guide her back to the people she loves.
For the first time in a single volume, we present the trilogy that changed the course of Spanish literature.
The author reconstructs the life of his great grandfather, Francisco Oller, who, at the age of sixteen, decided to leave Cassà and travel to France in search of a better life. And he found it.
The author reconstructs the life of his great grandfather, Francisco Oller, who, at the age of sixteen, decided to leave Cassà and travel to France in search of a better life. And he found it.
It is 1941. Young, beautiful Aurora leaves behind a tumultuous Spain and a tormented past to move to Mexico, where she takes a job as a nanny for the wealthy Vigil de Quiñones family.
After her parents get divorced, Marina feels nothing will ever be the same again. The only thing that hasn't changed is that she still spends her summer in the Camargue, the coastal region of France where her grandparents live.