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With its frank sexuality and searing critique of the Church, La Regenta scandalized contemporary Spain when it was first published in 1885.
Married to the retired magistrate of Vetusta, Ana Ozores cares deeply for her much older husband but feels stifled by the monotony of her life in the shabby and conservative provincial town. When she embarks on a quest for fulfillment through religion and even adultery, a bitter struggle begins between a powerful priest and a would-be Don Juan for the passionate young woman's body and soul. Spain's answer to Madame Bovary, La Regenta wittily depicts the complacent and frivolous world of the upper class.
700 pages, Mass Market Paperback
First published January 1, 1884
Las novelas era mejor vivirlas.
Setos de madreselva y zarzamora orlaban el camino, y de trecho en trecho se erguía el tronco de un negrillo [olmo], robusto y achaparrado, de enorme cabezota, como un as de bastos, con algunos retoños en la calvicie, varillas débiles que la brisa sacudía, haciendo resonar como castañuelas las hojas solitarias de sus extremos.
Hedges of honeysuckle and blackberry bordered the path, and here and there rose up the trunk of an elm, sturdy and squat, with an enormous crown, like an ace of clubs, with some shoots in the bare patches, weak rods that shook in the breeze, making the solitary leaves on their ends resonate like castanets.