La sombra del viento
Books | Fiction / General
4.5
(146)
Carlos Ruiz Zafón
Barcelona 1945, Semper lleva a su hijo Daniel al "cementerio de libros olvidados", un edificio grande, viejo y sombrío, lleno de volúmenes que la gente ha ido llevando allí para preservarlos del abandono o destrucción; según la tradición quien entra por primera vez tiene que adoptar un libro. Entre lo miles de títulos, Daniel se siente atraído por "La sombra del viento" de Julián Carax, una novela de misterio; esa noche en su casa lo lee de un tirón. Al día siguiente mucha gente desea este libro, unos lo quieren comprar pagando más de lo que vale, otros lo quieren quemar... En los siguientes años Daniel se verá envuelto en crímenes, intrigas y correrá peligro por proteger el libro de ciertas personas o al curiosear en la vida de Julián Carax, descubriendo que es tan enigmática o más que sus novelas.
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More Details:
Author
Carlos Ruiz Zafón
Pages
478
Publisher
Planeta
Published Date
2005
ISBN
0974872407 9780974872407
Ratings
Google: 4
Community ReviewsSee all
"The first time I started this book I got bored with the few first chapters and I abandoned it thinking that I wasn't going to pick it up ever again. A few months ago I decided to give it another chance since I didn't have anything else to read, and I can't explain how happy I am of doing it. This book, though sometimes it's bored me and has been a bit tedious with that many descriptions and the way it stops to talk about EVERY SINGLE DETAIL, it's been one of the best books I've read in the last years. It is not a book that has magic or fantasy (like I usually like), it is not a surrealist book. It's a book that talks about life and how all of us have a story to tell the world. The Shadow of the Wind talks about friendship, love, hate... it talks about people that are meant to meet each other and stories that need to be told, even decades later.<br/>From this book, I've learnt a lot and it leaves me with the feeling that I'd have to reread it a thousand times to learn everything it has to teach me. I've always thought that Carlos Ruiz Zafón was overrated and that his books were slow and boring, but now I can say that it's worth it to go through all those pages of infinite descriptions and I'm looking forward to reading more books by this author and learn as much as I have with this one."