La sed de sal, an intriguing and
reflexive crime novel, offers with prodigious prose a dazzling interpretation
of the fragility of what we know or interpret, of fatality and the feeling of
guilt.
A man who answers to the name of Travel travels to the city of Murania following the footsteps of a Hispanist
who went all over the region in the 1930s. Local feasts are being celebrated
and, due to the intrigues of the driver who picks him up on the road, Travel
ends up arrested in connection to the disappearance of a young woman. From his prison
cell, he can feel that the crowd outside wishes to lynch him. Regardless of his
conversations with the guards and of his frustrated attempt at escaping, Travel
cannot step out of this nightmare, at times seemingly diabolical and then a
strange and peculiar stratagem. With the cinematographic references of Touch of Evil by Orson Welles, or Breathless by Godard, the narrator
cannot help thinking about destiny, guilt and betrayal, while he tries to
obsessively reconstruct the net and the interests of the possible culprits.
Gonzalo Hidalgo Bayal was born
in Higuera de Albalat (Cáceres) in 1950. He has degrees both in Philology of
Romance Languages and in Visual Sciences from the Complutense University of
Madrid. He currently works as a high school literature teacher in the city of
Plasencia. He is the author of two literary essays, Camino de Jotán (On the Way to Jotán, 1994) and Equidistancias (Equidistances, 1997).
Hidalgo Bayal has become a singular narrator through his novels: Miseria fue, señora, la osadía (Misery Was,
Ma’am, the Audacity, 1988), El cerco
oblicuo (The Oblique Fence, 1993), Amad
a la dama (Love the Lady, 2002), and Paradoja
del interventor (Paradox of the Supervisor), his culminating work which
Tusquets recovered for its catalog, as it now does with Campo de amapolas blancas, a “desolate and masterful” narration, to
quote Luis Landero, and, in the words of Rafael Sánchez Ferlosio, “magnificent
and moving.”