- Time of past OR future Camino
- May 2023: Via Francigena, Lucca to Rome
I just finished reading La lluvia amarilla (The Yellow Rain; Julio Llamazares, 1988), a short novel about the last inhabitant of a dying village in the Spanish Pyrenees. It's a haunting and beautiful story, as the narrator reflects back on the days that the other families left the village, and as the winter wind and snow slowly destroy the remaining houses one by one.
It's not a "camino" book per se, but reading it I really felt like I was re-visiting some of the abandoned or semi-abandoned villages we saw along the way (San Antón, Foncebadón, et al.).
I highly recommend it for anyone who wants to revisit Spain this winter, and to gain a deeper understanding of some of the places we saw. Be warned, though: it is also an extremely sad story.
I can't vouch for the English translation, but the Spanish isn't complicated. It's on kindle, which has a pop-up Spanish to English dictionary to help with new words. It's definitely accessible to any intermediate readers.
It's not a "camino" book per se, but reading it I really felt like I was re-visiting some of the abandoned or semi-abandoned villages we saw along the way (San Antón, Foncebadón, et al.).
I highly recommend it for anyone who wants to revisit Spain this winter, and to gain a deeper understanding of some of the places we saw. Be warned, though: it is also an extremely sad story.
I can't vouch for the English translation, but the Spanish isn't complicated. It's on kindle, which has a pop-up Spanish to English dictionary to help with new words. It's definitely accessible to any intermediate readers.