After a lifetime spent at the homes of “refined
ladies” in La Algaida fixing their nails with his haute manicure and offering
gossip, chit-chat, and often therapeutic conversation, the manicurist Cigala is
officially granted recognition by the townspeople. He is practically considered
an institution, and so the city council has decided to name a street after him.
He is enthusiastic to hear the news, and because he
constantly feels like talking, he sees fit that the street chosen be the one
known thus far as Silence Street. It would be a compensation for everything
that he has had to keep quiet, even though that may be hard to believe. Until
the event takes place, he will tell everything, day to day, not only to his
quiet and senile sister, Antonia, whom he cares for in his own home, but also
to his clients, and to himself and the ghosts of his past. He will confront
Purita Mansero and all of those who are outraged because Silence Street belongs
to the Christ of Silence, and a procession in the Christ’s honor makes its way
through the street every Ash Wednesday.
In Ganas de
hablar (Feel Like Talking),
Eduardo Mendicutti constructs, through passionate soliloquies, the life of a
character who sees himself in everyone – women, immigrants, refined people who
are no more – and who claims his right to remember everything. He does so
through the masterful and colorful use of colloquial language, in danger of
extinction, which becomes the other main character of the novel.
About his previous work, California:
“I would almost dare to say that
California is Mendicutti’s best book, even more so than El palomo cojo or Los
novios búlgaros.” Antonio
Fontana, ABC Cultural
“Eduardo Mendicutti is one of the
most serious writers in current Spanish literature. He always manages to deepen
the wound through the use of humor, frivolity, and the troubles of the heart.” Luis García Montero, El País
“Eduardo Mendicutti will submerge
the reader in a fun and provocative parody.” Joaquín Arnáiz, La Razón
“A committed protest novel.” J. Ernesto Ayala-Dip, Babelia (El País)
“It is well worth it to approach
California.” Enrique
Turpin, El Periódico
“Mendicutti achieves what he wanted:
fun and emotion.” Aída R.
Agraso, Diario de Jerez
“This novel stands out due to its capacity for verbal elaboration.” Joaquín
Marco, El Cultural (El Mundo)
Eduardo Mendicutti was born in Sanlúcar de Barrameda (Cádiz) in
1948. In 1972 he moved to Madrid where
he obtained a degree in Journalism and where he has lived ever since. He has
won prizes such as the Café de Gijón and Sésamo. He has published over ten works, all of them
enthusiastically received by critics and public alike, and which have been
translated into different languages. Two of his novels, El palomo
cojo and Los novios búlgaros,
have been brought to the big screen, the first directed by Jaime de Armiñán and
the second by Eloy de la Iglesia. His novel El
ángel descuidado won the Critics’ Prize in Andalucía in 2002.