by Miguel Delibes ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 1, 1992
Spanish novelist Delibes (The Hedge, Five Hours with Mario--a monologue) here uses a series of psychiatric interviews to make a spare, dialogical novel. A tubercular Castilian peasant, Pacifico Perez, is interviewed by a prison psychiatrist, Dr. Lopez. Perez is in prison for killing (though in half-defense) the brother of his lover, the wild-and-crazy Candi, who had discovered them in flagrante one afternoon. Perez's life has been one of casual social violence and macho posture, all mixed up with Spanish rustic charm--giving his little village a perfectly congruent aide against which rested such general catastrophes as the Spanish Civil War. Explains Perez: ""Killing men was like killing wild boar: you have to do it when the time's fight. 'cause if you kill a boar in January, you get rewarded; but if you kill him in July, you're sorry, see. Well, the same for men. You kill 'em in wartime and you get a medal, but you kill 'em when there's peace and off you go for a while."" A jail break will provide some secondhand drama here, but mostly this is a focused on its own techniques and its Message (see above). Still, English-speaking readers of Delibes, and of contemporary Spanish writing, will want to keep abreast.
Pub Date: July 1, 1992
ISBN: N/A
Page Count: 312
Publisher: Univ. of Georgia Press
Review Posted Online: N/A
Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 1992
Categories: FICTION
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