Guest of the ilb 2002
Marcos Giralt Torrente
was born in Madrid in 1968. He studied philosophy and today works as
literary critic for the renown daily newspaper “El País”. He began
writing with stories which appeared, amongst others, collected in the
volume “Entiéndame” (1995). In 1999, his first novel “París” came out,
which was awarded the “Premio Herralde”, one of the most well-known
literary prizes in Spain.
“At that time I
used to enjoy reading narratives much more than novels”, says Marcos
Giralt Torrente on the period in which he worked on his first book
“Entiéndame”, a range of short stories which all, in some roundabout
often confused way, have to do with love, with seduction, jealousy, and
finally with the craving of writing. There is for example the story of
the playboy who seduces rich women to be kept by them. When the
narrator of the story quite by chance meets this cad in a scene, he
doesn’t give him away but interrogates him in great detail just to
satisfy his own curiosity.
Torrente is
concerned that narratives are less regarded in Spain than the novel and
that in a place where there are so many talented writers of stories.
Precisely with this genre you can learn literary discipline and the art
of shortening. In the best case, the narrative can interpret the many
aspects of the world through sudden enlightenment while the novel must
reflect these many aspects.
Perhaps Giralt
Torrente succeeded in such a portrayal of the world in his first novel
“París”. Here there is also a narrator, who constantly asks questions
altough they are directed more to himself than to his surroundings. In
a weaving of repetitions, variations and digging linguistically into
the past, the narrator attempts to follow his childhood in seventies
Madrid and the conflict between his parents whose constant arguing made
their son’s life hell. The father, a failed academic who has become a
small-time criminal, at some point leaves the family, his mother
succeeds, after many pointless attempts, to free herself from him.
Mother and son don’t just suffer due to their terrible destroyed
relationship but they are both also connected by a secret, which is
only revealed on the last page of the novel. This labyrinth-like book
of memories above all tells of the desire for absolute love – the
fulfilment of which may seem utopian but is at the same time the
driving force behind Marcos Giralt Torrentes’ writing: “If life and
love are our great dreams then we must have the courage to carry on
dreaming.”
In 2002, Torrente
was a guest of the German Academic Exchange Programme in Berlin. His
second novel, "Los seres felices" (t: The happy beings), was published
in 2005.
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