The Labyrinth of the Spirits
A Novel
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Narrateur(s):
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Daniel Weyman
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Auteur(s):
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Carlos Ruiz Zafon
À propos de cet audio
Carlos Ruiz Zafon masterpiece
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Labyrinth of the spirits
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Other than that (and the fact that the whole series reads like a warning against irresponsible sex) I really did enjoy it. There was one scene (I have this in audio format, too) that made a painful lump form in my throat and my eyes fill up. At work. Embarrassing.
The series is interesting in that it skips back and forth in the timeline, revisiting the same time period from different angles, flashing forward at the end of a book and then pulling back to some period in between in the next. The epilogue kind of makes sense of everything- it gets meta, with the 4 books being the magnum opus of Daniel's son Julian who only briefly mentions himself at the end of the book (where he explains everything, including his plan to only briefly mention himself at the end of the book.) It was a bold move, and I'm not sure how I feel about it.
Also, the end was very Return of the King Part 2, where Peter Jackson had no idea which ending to choose so he chose them all. I'm not mad, though. It was nice to have literally everything wrapped up neatly.
The Alicia storyline was more compelling than I thought it would be, partly because the nefarious scheme she uncovers was an actual thing. It provided a broader view of Francoist Spain than what we've seen through the lens of the Sempere bookstore.
The end, in 1992, with a bright new Spain, tourist friendly and free of shadow, was such a sad, poignant way of finishing things up. The Spain of Julian's parents and grandparents is gone, never to return, taking its magic with it. (In fairness, also a lot of darkness and misery, but hey.)
I was left feeling both satisfied and bummed out, not just because a series I am so fond of is over, but because it hammered home the fleeting, temporary nature of everything in life.
great
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