In this book, Emili Teixidor returns to the setting of his previous novel Pa Negre, this time dealing with a different facet of the post civil war era: the invasion of the villages and provinces by forces that are more cultural than military.
Lara is yet to turn fifteen and everything is already falling apart. It's a fight between life and death. A flare up of her illness has left her in the intensive care unit, spending the night that could be decisive alone.
Climate change is causing the sea levels to rise and flooding inhabited land. Serena, Emi and Max travel to the Sunderbans National Park, in Bangladesh, to investigate the phenomenon.
Inés, a fifty-year-old liberal professional, comfortably-off and married with two teenage children, seizes control of her life and turns it upside down. The reason why? Something as wild as stopping colouring her grey hairs.
Neskia Roth is peaceful village where lies don't exist and all the inhabitants live in total harmony with nature, but all this will change when Gaia, the Lady of the Dawn, is kidnapped by the Shadows of Fire and Oblivion, thus unleashing a freneti
Neskia Roth is peaceful village where lies don't exist and all the inhabitants live in total harmony with nature, but all this will change when Gaia, the Lady of the Dawn, is kidnapped by the Shadows of Fire and Oblivion, thus unleashing a freneti
Many surprises await the reader of this novel, including the delicate art of the goldsmith and Ignacio Abad’s precise way of developing and unfolding the plot.