Surviving in postwar Madrid is a hard job, especially
for Manolita, a young woman who must take care of her
four younger siblings after her father and stepmother become imprisoned and her
brother Antonio is forced to hide out in a flamenco club. To add to her
problems, Manolita will have to do Antonio a favor: he
has become desperate to put to use a set of duplicators that no one knows how
to work in order to print clandestine political propaganda, and will ask Manolita to visit a prisoner who might be able to figure
out how to get them to function. Manolita cannot
possibly imagine that this shy and apparently unattractive young prisoner will
end up becoming such an important part of her life and that their paths will
cross again in a penitentiary detachment. But first, Manolita
must discover the identity of the informer who is prowling around the
neighborhood. Las tres bodas de Manolita is a moving
choral story about the years of poverty and grief of the immediate Spanish postwar
period and an unforgettable fresco of real and imagined characters. A memorable novel about the web of solidarity woven by many people,
from the dancers of a flamenco club to the women that wait on line at the
prison doors to visit prisoners, in order to protect a courageous young woman
for whom happiness will also become a form of resistance.
Almudena Grandes (Madrid, 1960) became widely known as a writer in 1989
with her novel Las edades de Lulú,
which won the XI Sonrisa Vertical Prize. She
has received the acclaim of readers and critics ever since. She is the author
of eleven novels and two books of short stories that have established
her as one of the most solid and internationally-known narrators in contemporary
Spanish literature. Many of her works have been taken to the big screen, and
her novel, El corazón
helado, one of the most acclaimed and
long-lasting successes in current Spanish literature, has received, among other
awards, the Fundación Lara Prize, the prizes of the booksellers in Madrid and Seville, the Rapallo Carige in
Italy and the Prix Méditerranée in France. Her novel Inés y la alegría was
awarded the Critics Prize in Madrid in
2011, the Elena Poniatowska Prize 2011 and the Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz Prize 2011, and
El lector de Julio Verne was selected
best book of 2012 by the readers of El
País.