Tristana
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- £7.49
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- £7.49
Publisher Description
An NYRB Classics Original
Don Lope is a Don Juan, an aging but still effective predator on the opposite sex. He is also charming and generous, unhesitatingly contributing the better part of his fortune to pay off a friend’s debts, kindly assuming responsibility for the friend’s orphaned daughter, lovely Tristana. Don Lope takes her into his house and before long he takes her to bed.
It’s an arrangement that Tristana accepts more or less unquestioningly— that is, until she meets the handsome young painter Horacio. Then she actively rebels, sets out to educate herself, reveals tremendous talents, and soon surpasses her lover in her open defiance of convention. One thing is for sure: Tristana will be her own woman.
And when it counts Don Lope will be there for her.
Benito Pérez Galdós, one of the most sophisticated and delightful of the great European novelists, was a clear-eyed, compassionate, and not-a-little amused observer of the confusions, delusions, misrepresentations, and perversions of the mind and heart. He is the unsurpassed chronicler of the reality show called real life.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Readers both new to this haunting tale and those already familiar with the exquisite 1970 Luis Bu uel film adaptation (starring Catherine Deneuve) should rejoice at the arrival of this brilliant new translation of a mesmerizing novel from Gald s, who is often considered the greatest Spanish writer after Cervantes. After a painfully sheltered childhood and the death of both of her parents, Tristana is taken in by the aging Don Lope, who, in his constant, if misguided, quest for "honor," has paid off Tristana's father's enormous debts and promised her dying mother to look after the young, fragile woman. Though the town presumes them as kin, "after only two months, he had added her to his very long list of victories over innocence." Don Lope keeps the girl like a prisoner, establishing his dominance by proclaiming, "I regard you as both wife and daughter, as it suits me." But, before long, the housekeeper Saturna takes pity on Tristana and begins taking her out for surreptitious walks around Madrid. On such an outing, Tristana meets Horacio, a young painter, and the two fall instantly, madly in love; they later swap letters and swear eternal devotion to each another. Intense passion and the impossibility of their relationship fill most of the book, bringing to light Tristana's somewhat revolutionary opinions on marriage, independence, and the oppression of women. When fate hands Tristana yet another disastrous turn of events, however, her expectations for both men leads to a heartbreaking fate.