Books

By the book in 2017

Jaume Cabré is top among the most anticipated releases for the first part of the year, with Rafel Nadal, Sílvia Soler, Ian McEwan, Jean Echenoz and Yasmina Reza

A new year brings new book re­leases. Look­ing at the year ahead to pin down the most an­tic­i­pated books in 2017, it seems as if there is plenty for booklovers to get ex­cited about among the lit­er­ary nov­el­ties.

First among them is Jaume Cabré, who re­turns six years after Jo con­fesso with the pub­li­ca­tion of Quan ar­riba la penom­bra (Proa) in April. This new work is de­scribed as “an hon­est, nude, raw, black and twist­ing work” of in­ter­linked short sto­ries. With the air of a thriller, the sto­ries re­volve around a timid boy who rebels against a tyran­ni­cal teacher who ac­tu­ally turns out to be a mur­derer.

Mean­while, only last month Rafel Nadal also re­turned with yet an­other new book, La seny­ora Stend­hal (Columna), a story told by a lit­tle boy (Lluc) and set in the post-war pe­riod. The book starts off in Girona in 1990, but takes a step back in time to Lluc's child­hood home, after the dis­cov­ery of an old post­card in a book shop in the town's old quar­ter.

Va­lentí Puig also pub­lished a new novel in Jan­u­ary, El bar de l'AVE (Proa), which is an ac­com­plished so­cial dis­sec­tion of the coun­try, and full of lu­cid­ity and hu­mour.

This month, Sílvia Soler re­turns to book­shops with a gen­er­a­tional novel, Els Vells amics (Columna), a choral work set around a group of four fine art stu­dents who meet on a jour­ney to Paris and share an ex­cit­ing ad­ven­ture they will re­mem­ber for the rest of their lives.

How­ever, Ger­many is the des­ti­na­tion for Joan-Daniel Bez­sonoff in his story, La bal­la­r­ina de Berlin (Empúries), also due out this month. The book is based on the real char­ac­ter of the dancer Lea Niako, a Ger­man spy and friend of the coun­try's fu­ture Nazi lead­ers. Bez­sonoff de­scribes the Berlin be­fore Hitler's rise as a city full of cabarets, con­cert cafés and the­atres.

Com­ing months

In March, Xavier Bosch will bring out Nos­altres dos (Columna), which ques­tions whether friend­ship be­tween a man and a woman is pos­si­ble. Mean­while, Joan Car­reras pre­sents La dona del Cadil­lac (Proa), a thriller full of mys­tery set in a small moun­tain vil­lage.

Among the for­eign writ­ers of the Grup 62 pub­lish­ing house, the high­lights in­clude La bib­lioteca dels lli­bres re­but­jats by David Foenk­i­nos, who will come to Barcelona to pre­sent it per­son­ally, while Donna Leon's has new case for her In­spec­tor Brunetti. Also a must in March is Jo Nesbo's, La set, with a new case for Harry Hole.

In Jan­u­ary, L'Altra Ed­i­to­r­ial re­leased a new title by de­ceased US writer Car­son Mc­Cullers, Frankie Ad­dams, and this month, L'art de la ficció, by James Salter is also due to come out.

Other ti­tles worth keep­ing an eye out for this year is the debut in Cata­lan of Elis­a­bet Riera, with Llum, as well as the Doc­u­menta 2016 award win­ner, Jordi Amor's El forat in March.

Mean­while, Edi­cions de 1984 pub­lished Ed­ward Hirsch's po­etry for the first time in Jan­u­ary, Història par­cial de la meva es­tu­pid­esa i al­tres po­emes, as well as a new vol­ume of po­etry by Josep Riera, Trobadors amb tur­bant.

After his suc­cess­ful Mars del Carib, Sergi Pons re­turns this month with Dies de ratafia. Edi­cions de 1984 also un­veils the prose of Cather­ine Poulain with L'home del mar, which has been gen­er­ally well re­ceived by in­ter­na­tional crit­ics.

As for Periscopi, it goes for an­other title by Wajdi Mouawad, La sang de les prome­ses, and pub­lishes a first Cata­lan trans­la­tion of the Rhodes-born writer Hakan Gïnday, Daha!, a novel awarded the Médicis Éstranger prize in France in 2015.

Among oth­ers, Raig Vert will pub­lish En­vi­ada Es­pe­cial, a new novel by Jean Echenoz , which the writer will pre­sent in March in Barcelona. And in Feb­ru­ary, Ara Lli­bres re­leases Far­ishta, a new ad­ven­ture novel by Marc Pas­tor, as well as Ara comença tot, Lluís Homar's au­to­bi­og­ra­phy, writ­ten with the scriptwriter Jordi Por­tals.

Fi­nally Ana­grama this month pre­sents Ian McE­wan's lat­est book, Closca de nou, which tells the story of Ham­let from the point of view of an un­born child, while the French writer and play­wright Yas­mina Reza's Babilònia is out in March.

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