Forbidden territory : the memoirs of Juan Goytisolo, 1931-1956

by Juan Goytisolo

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Uno de los mejores textos quedado el género autobiográficoen España.

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4 reviews
Forbidden territory describes Goytisolo's childhood and student years in Barcelona, growing up in a conservative, bourgeois family during the civil war, and trying to flex his intellectual muscles as a young anti-establishment writer in the repressive climate of Franco's Spain in the early fifties.

There are effectively two complementary narratives going on. Most of the book is written as a conventionally-objective, linear first-person story that takes us through key moments like his mother's death in an air-raid when Juan was six; his father's exaggerated homophobia; the not-quite-sexual idyll with the fisherman Raimundo in a remote floating bar in the docks; visiting brothels with a bunch of drunken Colombians during a stay in Madrid; show more the first visits to Paris and his first meeting in the Gallimard office with publisher and writer Monique Lange, who would become his life-partner. But that's set against italicised chapters in which the Goytisolo of the 1980s addresses his younger self critically in the second person, in a more fluid, novelistic stream-of-consciousness style, undermining the pretence that everything is a controlled, well organised career progression. show less
Estuve leyendo este libro a lo largo de seis meses, desde que regresé de vacaciones. El año apenas empieza y debo decir que este es uno de los mejores libros que he leído últimamente. La claridad de ideas de Goytisolo, la forma en la que su narración parece fluir sin ningún tipo de traba, su muy convincente sinceridad, me hacen pensar que sólo un Premio Cervantes no fue suficiente para recompensar a uno de los narradores hispanos más hábiles de los últimos tiempos.
One of the best Spanish autobiographic texts
Gran autor contemporáneo. Hay que conocerlo, así que haré todo lo posible por leérmelo.

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134+ Works 2,847 Members
Juan Goytisolo Gay was born in Barcelona, Spain on January 5, 1931. He studied law at the University of Madrid and the University of Barcelona, but did not earn a degree. His first novel, The Young Assassins, was published in 1954. He wrote Children of Chaos and performed six months of military service before moving to Paris in 1956. He found work show more as a reader for Gallimard, one of France's premier publishing houses, and continued to write. His novels include Fiestas, Island of Women, Marks of Identity, Count Julian, Juan the Landless, Makbara, Landscapes after the Battle, The Marx Family Saga, A Cock-Eyed Comedy, State of Siege, and Exiled from Almost Everywhere. He also wrote two political travelogues entitled Countryside of Níjar and La Chanca and two memoirs entitled Forbidden Territory and Realms of Strife. He died on June 4, 2017 at the age of 86. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Some Editions

Bush, Peter (Translator)
Ceelen, Ton (Translator)
Roseen, Ulla (Translator)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Forbidden territory : the memoirs of Juan Goytisolo, 1931-1956
Original title
Coto vedado
Original publication date
1985

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Biography & Memoir, General Fiction, Literature Studies and Criticism
DDC/MDS
863.64Literature & rhetoricSpanish, Portuguese, Galician literaturesSpanish fiction20th Century1945-2000
LCC
PQ6613 .O79 .Z46313Language and LiteratureFrench, Italian, Spanish and Portuguese literaturesSpanish literatureIndividual authors, 1868-1960

Statistics

Members
101
Popularity
318,354
Reviews
4
Rating
(4.21)
Languages
6 — Dutch, English, French, German, Spanish, Swedish
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
13
ASINs
2