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Antonio Muñoz Molina

    January 10, 1956

    Antonio Muñoz Molina delves into the intricate interplay between reality and fiction, frequently exploring themes of memory and loss. His writing is characterized by a rich, atmospheric prose that transports readers into meticulously crafted fictional landscapes. Through his narratives, he examines the darker facets of the human condition while maintaining a distinctive literary voice.

    Beltenebros
    Like a Fading Shadow
    To Walk Alone in the Crowd
    In the Night of Time
    Sepharad
    La noche de los tiempos. Die Nacht der Erinnerungen, spanische Ausgabe
    • 2025

      Your Steps on the Stairs

      • 320 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      Set against the backdrop of Lisbon, a man's seemingly serene life begins to unravel as he prepares for his wife’s arrival. While she remains in New York focused on a research project, he grapples with unsettling feelings linked to their past marked by 9/11. As he meticulously plans their future, he becomes increasingly aware of a mysterious threat. This psychological thriller delves into the interplay of emotions and memories, revealing how they distort our reality and the fragile narratives we construct about ourselves.

      Your Steps on the Stairs
    • 2021

      De Quincey, Baudelaire, Poe, Joyce, Walter Benjamin, Melville, Lorca, Whitman... Antonio Muñoz Molina emulates these classical inspirations, following their peregrinations as well as telling their stories, in a book that is part memoir, part novel, part chronicle of urban wandering. A master collagist himself, Molina assembles overheard conversations, subway ads, commercials blazing away on public screens, snatches from books packed into bags, mundane anxieties, and the true flash of insight, into a poem of contemporary life: an invitation to be carried along by the sheer energy of the digital metropolis.

      To Walk Alone in the Crowd
    • 2017

      Antonio Muñoz Molina is a true original and has written a book unlike anything else: part fiction, part memoir, part meditation, in which the interiority of a murderer on the run - and not just any murderer but James Earl Ray, the assassin of Martin Luther King - is set against the interiority of the writer, when young, trying to find his voice. The stories of the killer and the writer circle each other, interrogate and echo each other, and then diverge. A novel is a kind of refuge too, Muñoz Molina suggests. Only one of the two men in this terrific book will find the refuge he seeks. Salman Rushdie

      Like a Fading Shadow
    • 2015
    • 2011

      Set against the backdrop of Madrid in 1935/36, just before the Spanish Civil War, Ignacio Abel, a successful architect, embarks on a passionate affair with American Judith Biely. Following a tragic turn of events, Ignacio searches for Judith amidst escalating political turmoil, leading to a fateful reunion in America. The novel intricately weaves themes of love, betrayal, and missed opportunities.

      La noche de los tiempos. Die Nacht der Erinnerungen, spanische Ausgabe
    • 2008

      Sepharad

      • 385 pages
      • 14 hours of reading
      4.0(288)Add rating

      From one of Spain's most celebrated writers, an extraordinary, inspired book--at once fiction, history, and memoir--that draws on the Sephardic diaspora, the Holocaust, and Stalin's purges to tell a twentieth-century story. Shifting seamlessly from the past to the present and following the routes of escape across countries and continents, Munoz Molina evokes people real and imagined who come together in a richly allusive pattern--from Eugenia Ginsburg to Grete Buber-Neumann, the one on a train to the gulag, the other heading toward a Nazi concentration camp; from a shoemaker and a nun who become lovers in a small Spanish town to Primo Levi bound for Auschwitz. From the well known to the virtually unknown--all of Molina's characters are voices of separation, nostalgia, love, and endless waiting. Written with clarity of vision and passion, in a style both lyrical and accessible, Sepharad makes the experience our own. A brilliant achievement.

      Sepharad
    • 1900