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What We Tried to Bury Grows Here

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

* Los Angeles Times Book Prize Finalist *
"Daring... In What We Tried to Bury Grows Here, almost two dozen narrators vie to convey the danger and uncertainty of life in a country where "tomorrow you never knew who would throw you against the wall for the actions of today." We hear from priests and soldiers, mothers and children, prisoners and refugees. Amid the inevitable violence and horror, there are the equally inevitable heroes and villains, but for everyone the world has acquired 'an evil stink.' Mariana knows her compatriots have no choice but to fight on, yet she also knows that 'the war will make us unrecognizable to our former selves.'"

—Alida Becker, The New York Times
"Zabalbeascoa brings together family lore and mountains of research to paint a kaleidoscopic portrait of the Spanish Civil War, particularly its impact on the people of Spain's Basque region."
—Kate Tuttle, The Boston Globe
A masterly crafted and haunting tale of survival, longing, and empathy, set during the Spanish Civil War.
In late 1936, eighteen-year-old Isidro Elejalde leaves his Basque village in Northern Spain, spurred to join the fight to preserve his country's democracy from the insurrectionists by the rousing words of a political essayist. Months earlier, Spanish generals launched a military coup to overthrow Spain's newly elected left-wing government. They assumed the population would welcome the coup, but throughout the country people like Isidro remained loyal to the ideals of democracy, and the Spanish Civil War began in bloody earnest.
In Bilbao, Mariana raises her two young children while, with her writing, she decries the fascist-backed coup attempt and their German and Italian allies, imploring the world to support democracy. As the Nationalist forces assault the country, Mariana and Isidro's lives intersect fleetingly, yet in meaningful and lasting ways.
Through a chorus of voices—a female soldier in an all-male battalion, a reluctant conscript recently emigrated from Cuba, a young girl whose parents have abandoned her in order to fight against the fascists, among others—we follow Isidro and Mariana as they struggle to maintain their humanity in a country determined to tear itself apart.
Julian Zabalbeascoa is a fierce and assured new talent, and What We Tried to Bury Grows Here is a remarkable feat of research and imagination, as well as a transcendent literary accomplishment.

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    • Kirkus

      October 1, 2024
      The Spanish Civil War as it played out in the Basque region, chronicled from multiple points of view. Debut novelist Zabalbeascoa's decision to tell his story through a plethora of individual narrators perfectly captures the messiness of a civil war whose participants ranged from outright fascists, right-wing Catholics, and other conservatives aligned with Franco's Nationalist rebels to the collection of anarchists, socialists, communists, and traditional democrats fighting for the Spanish Republic. This decision, however, also means that readers will need considerable time to discern the unifying thread involving Isidro Elejalde, a Republican soldier, and Mariana, who under the pen name Erlea writes impassioned pleas to her fellow Basques to join the fight to preserve democracy. Their anti-fascist salvos are eloquent, but Zabalbeascoa provides other perspectives as well. Some Nationalists offer standard tropes about godless rojos and "divine intervention on our side," but more humane voices include a Nationalist guard who watches his fellow soldiers abuse helpless prisoners and thinks, "This isn't why I fought," and a nun who smuggles out a note from Mariana pleading for help after her newborn child is taken away to be given to "a mother and a father who have not fallen." Nationalist atrocities are amply documented, but a wife-beating Republican and Isidro's anguished confession after he shoots two teenage boys--"I've become the very thing I left home to fight"--make it clear there was brutality on both sides. The war's deadly psychological toll is incarnated in a woman known as Have You Seen, who wanders the devastated countryside asking after the son everyone knows was killed months ago. As the Republican remnants straggle toward the border, Zabalbeascoa enlists Have You Seen to suggest tentative recovery from the wounds of war in a touching penultimate scene. Even the bleak final chapter describing the refugees' chilly reception in France offers a glimpse of hope for the future. Slow to start, but builds to an emotionally compelling climax.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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