La Arbo de la Sciado (Stafeto : belliteratura serio 31)

by Pío Baroja

Other authorsFernando de Diego (Translator), Juan Régulo Pérez (Foreword)
Book, 1973

Status

Available

Call number

468

Publication

La Laguna, J. Régulo Eldonisto

Description

A sparse, witty, and unsentimentally brutal novel, The Tree of Knowledge, originally published in 1911, is a philosophical coming of age story not unlike Jack London's Martin Eden. Baroja's observations and criticisms of late 19th century Spanish society remain just as relevant today--perhaps even more so--because they are based on his strong understanding of human nature and the human condition. The philosophical, religious, and scientific questions that consume Andrés Hurtado and which are debated throughout the book, particularly with his uncle Iturrioz, are still the questions that haunt late-stage Western civilization today. A stunning novel, now back in print in a completely new, re-typeset edition.

User reviews

LibraryThing member podocyte
Story is set in the late 19th century Madrid and southern Spain. Andres Hurtado struggles through life as an unmotivated doctor. Several references to philosophical, political and biological thinking of the day.

Language

Original language

Spanish

Original publication date

1911

ISBN

84-400-6199-4 / 9788440061997

Similar in this library

Page: 0.2607 seconds