An ambitious fresco about
the recent history of the País Vasco. A
saga and a portrait of a magic and yet realistic microcosm that is the town of
Getxo. Verdes valles, colinas rojas
(Green Valleys, Red Hills) is the great novel about the collision between a
changing world and a town that resists all change. The story begins at the end of the XIX Century with the
confrontation between Cristina Oiaindia, an aristocrat married to the rich
industrialist Camilo Baskardo, and Her, an ambitious and astute servant without
a name that single-handedly endangers all traditional values when she announces
that she is expecting an illegitimate child.
That story of that rivalry, prolonged for decades and which marked the
history of Getxo, is told by two protagonists: Mr. Manuel, an old teacher, and Asier Altube, his favorite
disciple. They recall the meanders and
ramifications of many other stories derived from these, such as that of Roque
Altobe, the first-born, in love with a socialist agitator, or that of the Baskardo
boys, who had to live through their
mother’s madness.
Ramiro
Pinilla was born in Bilbao in 1923.
He won the Nadal Prize in 1960 and the National Prize of the Critics
in 1961 with the novel Las ciegas
hormigas (The Blind Ants), and
was a finalist to the Planeta Prize in 1971 with Seno (Breast). For almost three decades he voluntarily
distanced himself from the publishing industry. During that time, Pinilla
published his own works, such as En el
tiempo de los tallos verdes (In the
Age of Green Stems, 1969), Recuerda,
oh recuerda (Remember, Oh Remember,
1974), Primeras historias de la Guerra
interminable (The First Stories of the Never-ending War,
1977), La gran guerra de Doña Toda (The Great War of Mrs. Toda, 1978), Andanzas de Txiqui Baskardo (The Adventures
of Txiqui Baskardo, 1980), Quince
años (Fifteen Years, 1990), and Huesos (Bones, 1997). Pinilla returned to the publishing circuit with Verdes valles, Colinas rojas (Green Vallies, Red Hills), a trilogy
made up of the novels La tierra convulsa
(The Earth Trembles), Los cuerpos desnudos (Naked Bodies), and Las cenizas del hierro (Iron
Ashes) that won the Euskadi Prize 2005, the National Critics
Prize, and the National Prize for Narrative in 2006. That same year,
Pinilla published La higuera (The Fig Tree), a novel about the Civil
War, humiliation, and forgiveness that is currently being translated into
several languages.