Fludd
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- 10,99 €
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- 10,99 €
Descripción editorial
Un cura que ya no cree en Dios, una monja infeliz con la vida en el convento y un forastero de intenciones misteriosas, el extraño Fludd, confluyen un otoño en Fetherhoughton. "Vine a transformarlos, yo me dedico a transformar", dice Fludd a poco de llegar a ese pueblo asediado por el viento. Y es precisamente la transformación lo que mueve esta novela magnética de Hilary Mantel, en la que caben tanto una feroz crítica a la Iglesia Católica como un comentario agudo sobre la fuerza y pertinencia —o no— del cambio y la modernización.
Fludd es una novela de ideas sutiles y a la vez implacables, una lectura que desarma, como su protagonista, las posturas convencionales sobre el libre albedrío, la naturaleza del bien y del mal, y la necesidad humana de rituales y supersticiones. Entrañable en su representación de la vida de provincias y las comunidades religiosas, Fludd es sobre todo una demostración del enorme talento literario de Hilary Mantel, dos veces ganadora del prestigioso Premio Booker. Publicada originalmente en 1989 y galardonada con los premios Winifred Holtby, Cheltenham y Southern Arts Literature, se presenta por primera vez en español en esta edición.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Originally published in 1989 in the U.K., Mantel's slim, intense novel displays the author's formidable gift for illuminating the darker side of the human heart, offering metaphoric and literal incarnations of the powerful central images of Catholicism. Her circa-1956 setting of Fetherhoughton, a provincial English village surrounded on three sides by gloomy moors, is stark and dreary, a dead end where unwanted people are unceremoniously dumped. Such is the case of Sister Philomena, a sturdy farm girl-turned-nun banished from an Irish convent because her sister Kathleen breaks convent rules. It becomes apparent that Philomena will not fit in anywhere, as she is a strange mix of innocence and knowledge, a sage romantic. Philomena finds an unlikely confidant in Father Angwin, the parish priest, who has lost his faith, thinks the town tobacconist is the devil and fears the threat of a youthful replacement for his post. When a rain-soaked man named Fludd arrives on a stormy night, Angwin assumes it is the newly appointed curate, but even so, the two become close friends and, in time, Angwin sheds his bitterness and paranoia to become a more compassionate, wiser person. Fludd sweeps the nosy housekeeper, Agnes, off her feet with his gentlemanly manners and cool confidence, but Philomena is also strangely attracted to the devilish Fludd, who magically transforms everyone he meets. The monstrous Mother Perpetua, headmistress of the St. Thomas Aquinas School, is the lone exception, and she ends up being a key player in the rural face-off between good and evil. Hawthornden Prize-winner Mantel (The Giant, O'Brien) uses her knack for dry wit and lovely, scene-setting detail to liven up crisp, utilitarian prose, revealing, as her characters do, the ever-surprising divine in the mundane.