Literature

Madrid Then vs Now

When David Price first arrived in Madrid in the 1990s, he stepped into a city that bore little resemblance to the polished capital we know today. As the owner of The Secret Kingdoms bookshop in the heart of Madrid’s literary district, David has witnessed three decades of extraordinary change that transformed Spain’s capital from a […]

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The female gaze: celebrating Madrid’s women writers

Male narratives have long dominated Madrid’s literary scene. So it was a heartening sight when Almudena Grandes’ name went up in lights in Atocha Station’s tropical garden in March last year. With the station officially rechristened Atocha Almudena Grandes in honour of the recently deceased novelist, it feels as if women’s literature is finally on

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Ateneo de Madrid’s Turbulent History

Ayuso squares off against Ateneo Ateneo de Madrid, one of the city’s most important cultural institutions, has just had its 100,000 euros per annum local government funding abruptly shut off. The only local organization hit by a total funding cut, speculation that the move is politically motivated is rife. The heart of the problem seems

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On Guard! Dueling in the Golden Age of Spanish Literature

In Madrid’s Royal Academy of History lies a document that has had scholars of Spanish literature up in arms ever since it was discovered in a dusty archive in Valladolid back in 1840. Dated September 1569, it’s an order for the arrest of a “certain Miguel de Cervantes” accused of gravely wounding Don Antonio de

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