The Sleeping Voice

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Description

Dulce Chacón’s book has had an immense success in Spain, no doubt because the novelist speaks with a just and powerful voice, and because she has allowed women – the most anonymous, the most suppressed, the most silenced – to speak out” Le MondeIt is 1939. In the Ventas prison in Madrid a group of women have been incarcerated. Their crime is to have supported or fought on the Republican side in Spain’s cruel and devastating Civil War. Chief among them are Hortensia, who fought with the militia and is pregnant by her husband Felipe – a man still at large and fighting against Franco’s dictatorship – and who lives with the knowledge that she will be shot after she gives birth; sixteen-year-old Elvira, who tried to leave Spain with her mother, but was arrested by the Falangists while she was boarding their ship; Tomasa, whose husband, four sons and daughter-in-law were thrown off a bridge; and Pepita, Hortensia’s sister, who from outside the prison acts as messenger between her and her husband.Dulce Chacón’s deeply moving novel is based on the actual testimonies of a number of women who survived the Spanish Civil War, and suffered imprisonment under the France regime, as well as on accounts of others who died fighting for freedom. A bestseller in Spain, where it was voted ‘Book of the year’, The Sleeping Voice is remarkable for its combination of dramatic intensity and historical authenticity.

Additional information

Weight 0.334 kg
Dimensions 2 × 15.5 × 23.4 cm
by

,

Format

Paperback

Language

Pages

272

Publisher

Year Published

2006-1-5

Imprint

Publication City/Country

London, United Kingdom

ISBN 10

1843432099

About The Author

Dulce Chacón was born in Zafra (Badajoz) in 1954. A prize-winning poet and novelist, her life was cut short by cancer just as The Sleeping Voice was establishing her reputation throughout Europe.

Review Quote

'Dulce Chacón's book has had an immense success in Spain, no doubtbecause the novelist speaks with a just and powerful voice, and becauseshe has allowed women – the most anonymous, the most suppressed, themost silenced – to speak out.' Martine Silber, Le Monde