La Gaviota
La gaviota, the great Fernan Caballero Spanish novel, in a US printed edition Fernán Caballero is one of the great XIX Century Spanish novelist, considered the first to introduce the realist novel in Spain.
1117003981
La Gaviota
La gaviota, the great Fernan Caballero Spanish novel, in a US printed edition Fernán Caballero is one of the great XIX Century Spanish novelist, considered the first to introduce the realist novel in Spain.
26.4 In Stock
La Gaviota

La Gaviota

by Fernan Caballero
La Gaviota

La Gaviota

by Fernan Caballero

Paperback

$26.40 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    In stock. Ships in 1-2 days.
  • PICK UP IN STORE

    Your local store may have stock of this item.

Related collections and offers


Overview

La gaviota, the great Fernan Caballero Spanish novel, in a US printed edition Fernán Caballero is one of the great XIX Century Spanish novelist, considered the first to introduce the realist novel in Spain.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9789871136124
Publisher: Stockcero
Publication date: 01/05/2004
Pages: 280
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.63(d)
Language: Spanish

About the Author

Real name: Cecilia Francisca Böhl de Faber. (1796 -1877) She was born on December 24, 1796 in Morges, Switzerland, and educated in Germany. Daughter of the Hispanic artist Juan Nicolás Böhl de Faber and a lady from Cádiz. She moved to Cádiz in 1813 because of her father's work. In 1816, she married Antonio Planells and Bardaxi, an infantry captain who died in action a year later. In 1822 the young widow married Don Francisco Ruiz del Arco, Marquis of Arco Hermoso, an officer of the Royal Guard. Deceased Arco Hermoso in 1835, the now Marchioness went through painful economic circumstances, until two years later she remarried, this time with Antonio Arrón de Ayala, a considerably younger man. Arrón de Ayala was appointed consul in Australia and embarked on various businesses that brought him considerable fortune until ruinous financial speculation in 1859 pushed him to suicide. As early as 1840 the writer had published an anonymous romance Sole, in German, and in 1849 her novel La Gaviota, originally written in French, was translated into Spanish by José Joaquín de Mora and published as a folletin in El Heraldo. Eugenio de Ochoa, a prominent literary critic, ratified the popular success by saying that the now-named Fernán Caballero was a worthy Spanish rival to Sir Walter Scott. She was for many years one of the most read authors in Spain, and her death in Seville on April 7, 1877 was a cause of popular mourning.
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews