7 Essential Books on Spanish Culture of the 19th-21st Centuries

Fran Glaría | Traveling Steps

In January 2021, Guide Collective launched its very own Book Club (GCBC). Spanish tour guide Francisco Glaría presented The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway with an incredible introduction video from Hemingway’s room at Hotel La Perla in Pamplona and wrapped up the month with a group discussion from the city’s famous Café Iruña, with a special guest appearance by John Hemingway, the grandson of the Pulitzer Prize-winning, literature-changing author.

In response to the interest from our GCBC members, Fran has created a supplemental reading list for any who would like to know more about the Spain of Hemingway’s era and beyond.


Francisco Glaría’s 7 essential picks

Francisco Glaría’s 7 essential picks


At the end of the 1800s, Spain lost all its remaining colonies (Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Philippines). The dream of being an Empire ended, and Spain fell into a moral and economic depression. King Alfonso XIII pretended to be an absolutist monarch in a society that didn't believe in Royals anymore.  People were hungry and small revolutions started all around the country. By 1923 (the year Ernest Hemingway arrived in Pamplona), the tension in the streets was palpable. Only in big celebrations, like the Running of the Bulls, people could forget their struggles. 

The House of Bernarda Alba by Federico García Lorca
Available on Amazon and Book Shop

In this drama, Federico García Lorca, shows us the relationship between a mourning mother (Bernarda) and her five daughters. It is a brutal and destructive relationship where we find the traditional and many times violent approach to the female world at that time.

This book was written as a theater play; and for Spanish actresses, playing the role of Bernarda is the equivalent to representing Hamlet for the Brits.


The Innocent Saints by Miguel Delibes
Spanish version available on Amazon and BookShop

Although this book is not available in an English translation, the original Spanish work was published in 1981, and it shows us the Spain of the 1960's. It was the moment of Franco´s brutal dictatorship. 

It is a moral complaint against the rich landlords and how they inhumanely treat their servants. The brutal hierarchy of society causes dehumanization. At the end of the book, you realize that the Innocent Saints—the family that serves the wealthy—are much more human than the perfect-looking rich family.


For Whom the Bells Tolls by Ernest Hemingway
Available on Amazon and BookShop

This book had to be in this list yes or yes. It is Ernest’s point of view on the Spanish Civil War. When you will read, you will realize that our writer was 100% against Franco, and as you can imagine, Franco banned the publication of this book in Spain. When Paramount Movies decided to make a film out of the book, Franco sent Hollywood writers (censors) to help with the script. Nonetheless, the movie premiered in Spain in 1978, once Franco had died.


Yerma by Federico García Lorca
Available on Amazon and BookShop

Here’s another masterpiece by Federico García Lorca. This time we visit rural Spain, where a woman had to have a baby, especially a boy, in order to be considered a good woman. Unfortunately, Yerma doesn´t get pregnant, but the one who is sterile is her husband Juan. Social pressure is so strong that she prefers to kill Juan over not being considered a complete woman.

In this play, the name of the characters is very symbolic. Juan means John, like John the Baptist in the Bible, the one who gives Christian life to people. And Yerma is an old Spanish word that means that something is not fertile.


National Episodes by Benito Perez Galdós
Spanish versions available on Amazon and BookShop

This is not one book, in fact they are 46 books. All written by Benito Perez Galdós between 1872 and 1912. It tells us the history of Spain in the 19th century. At the beginning, Mr. Galdós shows us a very empowered Spain fighting against the French Empire (Napoleon). But little by little, that spark starts to fade, and it ends at the moment in history when Spain has lost all its colonies.

It is an incredible portrait of the Spanish society, and although it might seem to be too long or too complicated to follow, the greatness of these books is that  they are all independent stories, set each one of them in a moment in time and the historical moment is just the background.

Fortunata and Jacinta by Benito Perez Galdós
Available on Amazon and Barnes and Noble

In this other classic by Don Benito Perez Galdós, we go to Madrid at the end of the XIX century. It is a moment when social differences were at its highest in Spain. This time we will find two women, Fortunata and Jacinta who come from different backgrounds—both socially and economically—struggling to survive. These two main characters represent the two Spains, but around them there are more than 1000 extras who shows the reader all the different realities in Spain.


Bacchanalia by John Hemingway
Available on Amazon and BookShop

Following the footsteps of his grandfather Ernest Hemingway, John Hemingway tells us the life of a group of expatriates in the city of Pamplona during the Festival of The Running of the Bulls.

I really recommend reading this book after reading The Sun also Rises by Ernest Hemingway, because this way, you will perceive the difference in the city from 1920s to today.

Fran Glaria

Fran Glaria was born and raised in Pamplona, part of the Basque country in northern Spain.  His passions for history, art and food, led him to tour guiding. Over 20 years ago, he started a small local guiding company in his hometown. This company evolved into designing tours in the Basque region, and also into organizing tours for the Running of the Bulls festival in Pamplona. In 2012 Fran joined the Rick Steves’ Europe team and discovered a great way of teaching about his culture. You can follow Fran and Traveling Steps on Facebook and Instagram.

Previous
Previous

The Tree of Love | The Lebanese Cedar Tree of Piemonte

Next
Next

SICILY THROUGH 6 MOVIES