Javier
Cercas uses
the image of Jonas in El vientre de la ballena (The Belly of the Whale) to reflect
periods of confusion and uncertainty suffered by all human beings. This young
Catalonia-based writer and professor of literature relates the tragicomic experiences undergone by a
series of likeable, somewhat abstracted and insane characters -as anyone in
their circumstances would be- in their journey through the belly of the whale.
About Javier Cercas’ previous book of short stories, El móvil (The Motive), one critic for La Vanguardia stated: We discover a skillful narrator, gifted with
an undisputable command of narrative techniques and a fresh resourcefulness...
Cercas has not lost his wonderful
inventiveness; in fact, with El vientre de la ballena he reaffirms
himself as a great novelist, once compared to Flaubert, his main influence.
One August afternoon, Tomás bumps into Claudia, an old love from his adolescence. This simple and
fortuitous encounter makes his life take an unexpected turn: it provides him
with the woman of his life, but he also adopts the lead role in a nightmarish
comedy of intrigue. Everything is disrupted: a languishing marriage, his
precarious position as assistant professor at the University, his lifelong
friends. Nothing is like it used to be. Dragged by such extreme events, Tomás, the reflexive professor, as if
inadvertedly seeking his own downfall, desperately pursues a mysterious and
ambiguous romance which he senses can only be fatal. Tomás leads us through his bizarre experiences, while, thanks to
the cynical distance granted to him by his memory, he extends his painful
understanding about inextricable human relationships and the illusion of
happiness.
Javier Cercas was born in Ibarhenando, Cáceres in 1962. He is the author
of a book of short stories, Cuentos reales (True Tales) 2000, of a nouvelle, El
móvil (The motive) 1987 and 2003, and of three novels, El inquilino (The
Tenant) 1989 and 2000, El vientre de la ballena (The Belly of the Whale), and
Soldados de Salamina (Soldiers of Salamis). The latter is a novel that reached
unprecedented success in bookshops, with readers, writers, and critics. It has received
the following prizes: Premi Llibreter 2001 Narrativa, Premi Ciutat de
Barcelona, Premio Librería Cálamo al mejor libro del año 2001, Premio Salambó,
Premio de la Crítica de Chile, IV Gran Premio Qué Leer de los Lectores, Premio
de Novela Histórica de Cartagena, Premio Extremadura a la Creación, Premio de
los Lectores Crisol, Premio Grinzane Cavour. Javier Cercas worked for two years at the University of Illinois and,
since 1989, is professor of Spanish literature at the University of Girona. He
collaborates regularly in the newspaper El País.