Book description
The Spanish are reputed to be amongst Europe's most voluble people.
So why have they kept silent about the terrors of the Spanish Civil
War and the rule of dictator Generalísimo Francisco Franco? The
appearance - sixty years after that war ended - of mass graves
containing victims of Franco's death squads has finally broken what
Spaniards call 'the pact of forgetting'. At this charged moment, Giles
Tremlett embarked on a journey around Spain - and through Spanish
history. Tremlett's journey was also an attempt to make sense of his
personal experience of the Spanish. Why do they dislike authority
figures, but are cowed by a doctor's white coat? How had women
embraced feminism without men noticing? What binds gypsies, jails and
flamenco? Why do the Spanish go to plastic surgeons, donate their
organs, visit brothels or take cocaine more than other Europeans?
Giles Tremlett is the Guardian's Madrid correspondent. He has
lived in, and written extensively about, Spain almost continuously
since graduating from Oxford University twenty years ago.