Family of Pascual Duarte

by Camilo Jose Cela

Paperback, 1982

Status

Available

Call number

863.62

Collection

Publication

Avon Bard Books (1982), Paperback, 144 pages

Description

Unabridged edition of Cela's modern novel, with study aids. Winner of the 1989 Nobel Prize for Literature.

User reviews

LibraryThing member AnnieMod
The fictional narrator that starts the story is there just to introduce it - a story that he had found and is just publishing. The real story is the first person narrative of Pascual Duarte - who had decided to write his story after he had been condemned to die for a murder.

Pascual is one of the
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poor, almost illiterate boys which had lived in the small villages in Spain at the beginning of the 20th century. Growing up without the love of his parents (even if they were present) and seeing violence as the way to succeed in life, he becomes short tempered enough to be pulling a knife on anyone that he does not like. And if for the first half of the story you almost feel sorry for him and for what is happening to him, his constant disavowing of his own actions and blaming them to the Fate or whatever you want to call it start nagging at you. And then he kills for the first time.

There is a lot of people that will never take responsibility for their own action - that believe that it is fate that they got in a trouble. For these people anything bad happening to them is not their fault and they apologize any bad decision with this. Pascual is one of these people - to the point where he blames his early release from prison for his further crimes.

The novel's narrative finishes before the Spanish war erupts. Pascual's story does not - we know that he kills again during the war - but we never get any details. The fact that this last murder is so different from the rest of them is an anomaly that leaves the reader thinking about what might have happened - was it Pascual deciding to throw himself on one side of the war or was him, remembering meeting the killed earlier in life and deciding that if he cannot have anything, he can at least do that.

It's a depressing story - all too familiar, all too contemporary, even if it was originally written in 1942. Violence begets violence and following one's impulses can lead to a ruin. Even if one blames the Fate for everything. And the fact that the author manages to tell such a common story in a way that keeps you reading is only showing his talent.
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LibraryThing member jmaloney17
I'm not sure what I think of this book. It might be too literary for me. Not enough story.
LibraryThing member hbergander
The protagonist is the type of a vigorous man, who considers violence being the only way to step forward. There is a lot of brutality in this book. Reading it, one does not wonder about the atrocities of the Spanish civil war.

Language

Original language

Spanish

Original publication date

1942 (original Spanish)

ISBN

0380011751 / 9780380011759
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