Carlos, a divorced father, picks up his fourteen
year-old son Jorge to leave on a weekend trip to the mountain and, as if by
mistake, leaves the manuscript of his recently finished novel to his ex-wife,
Carmen. The reading of the manuscript, a crime fiction novel about extortion,
will be very revealing to her about the intentions of her ex-husband.
Meanwhile, Carlos must overcome a communication problem with his son, a panicky
adolescent. Carmen becomes more and more frightful and anxious about what may
be going on in the mountain… Or is it the reading of the manuscript that is
provoking these feelings? “In living with someone, as in writing, one reveals
himself,” thinks one of the characters. In reading too, when
we interpret that which is left unwritten.
The novel brings together the resentment of amorous
relationships, the unsettling nature of the mountain and the woods, and
parental guilt and its reflection in adolescents. It is shaped as a
psychological thriller where the winding paths of reading and the projection of
our own fears create a horror plot constructed from different perspectives.
Rafael Reig was born in Cangas de Onís
(Asturias, Spain) in 1963. He spent his childhood in Colombia and studied
Philosophy and Literature at Madrid’s Autonoma
University. He gave literature classes in New York, where he received his
doctorate degree, and in several American universities. He currently teaches at
the Hotel Kafka, a school of creative writing in Madrid, and is a contributor
to several publications, both in digital and paper formats. From among his
novels, Sangre a borbotones
(Blood on the Saddle, 2002) was
awarded the Critics’ Prize in Asturias
and was chosen by the Lara Foundation as one of the five best novels written in
Spanish in 2002, and his previous novel, Todo está perdonado
(All Is Forgiven, 2011), was awarded
the VI Tusquets Editores
Prize for Novel 2010.