Aroa Moreno is the guest this week at What are you reading?the EL PAÍS book podcast. The author chats with Berna González Harbor about her latest book, Tomorrow they will kill Daniela trip to the last executions of Franco’s regime in the same landscape in which he spent his youth. Moreno, born in 1981, recounts some deaths from 1975 that she has had to reconstruct with pick and shovel: “No one told me about Francoism and I have filled in the gaps,” she says. “The dictatorship continues to be a backbone of current politics.” The writer comments on the presence of her son, Pablo, in the pages of the book, a child who already knows who Franco was and who is not interested in his books.
Andrea Aguilar comments on Moreno’s previous novels: The Communist’s Daughter and Bajamar. And Pablo Guimón, responsible for Culture and Babelia, brings us his recommendations.
The foreignerby Albert Camus.
Writing or life, by Jorge Semprún.
The years, by Annie Ernaux.
blood weddingby Federico García Lorca.
Doctor Zhivagoby Boris Pasternak.
Father Pica, by Julio Núñez.
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