EBOOK

The Tomb in Seville

Crossing Spain on the Brink of Civil War

Norman Lewis
5
(1)
Pages
150
Year
2013
Language
English

About

The last work of renowned travel writer Norman Lewis: a thrilling adventure through 1930s Spain on a pilgrimage to the tomb of a Spanish ancestor In the 1930s, Norman Lewis and his brother-in-law, Eugene Corvaja, journeyed to Spain to visit the family's ancestral tomb in Seville. Seventy years later, with evocative and engrossing prose, Lewis recounts the trip, taken on the brink of the Spanish Civil War. Witnesses to the changing political climate and culture, Lewis and Corvaja travel through the countryside from Madrid to Seville by bus, car, train, and on foot, encountering many surprises along the way. Dodging the skirmishes that will later erupt into war, they immerse themselves in the local culture and landscape, marveling at the many enchantments of Spain during this pivotal time in its history.

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Reviews

"Confirms [Lewis] as one of the greatest English writers of the 20th century."
The Guardian
"[Lewis is] the finest travel writer of the last century."
The New Yorker
"Whether he's capturing the comedy of trying to find a suitable cafe in Madrid while a street fight rages, depicting the isolated wildlife of the Sierra de Guadarrama mountains or commenting on the 'cheap and cheerful' lives of the farmers' daughters he and Corvaja meet on a train, his well-crafted descriptions are honest and evocative."
The New Yorker

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