FICTION

Marina

tr. from Spanish by Lucia Graves. 326p. Little, Brown. Jul. 2014. Tr $18. ISBN 9780316044714; ebk. $9.99. ISBN 9780316320177.
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RedReviewStarGr 8 Up—Set in Barcelona, Spain from late 1979 to May 1980, this gothic novel centers around 15-year-old boarding school student Oscar Drai. Instead of studying during his free time, the teen explores the city, and one day ends up in an area that seems deserted. Drawn in by music coming from an old dilapidated house, Oscar is given a scare by the owner, an eccentric and haunted German artist. Having accidently taken a watch from the house, the boy returns to bring the valuable item back and meets the enigmatic Marina. Realizing that they both like mysteries, Marina invites Oscar on an escapade to a graveyard to observe a woman who leaves a red rose on an unmarked grave. The two follow this woman, lose her, but eventually wander into an abandoned greenhouse filled with sinister marionettes and grotesque photos. Soon, the narrator becomes embroiled in the lives and histories of a presumed dead actress, recluse tycoon, and mad scientist obsessed with escaping death. From the very first page, this beautifully written work of historical fiction is impossible to put down. With elements of romance, mystery, and horror, none of them overwhelming the other, this complex volume that hints at Mary Shelley's Frankenstein manages to weave together three separate stories for a cohesive and eerie result.—Jesten Ray, Seattle Public Library, WA
While exploring the rundown outskirts of late-1970s Barcelona, fifteen-year-old boarding school student Oscar Drai stumbles upon what appears to be an abandoned home and decides to investigate. But an unexpected encounter with its inhabitants sends him fleeing into the night with a pocket watch in his hand that doesn't belong to him. When he goes back the next day to return the watch, he discovers that the house belongs to Germán, an aging artist with a tragic past, and his frail daughter, Marina, with whom Oscar develops a close friendship. After witnessing a ghostly graveyard ritual, Oscar and Marina suddenly find themselves entangled in a series of events that had been set in motion at the turn of the twentieth century, involving an eccentric scientist and his quest to unravel the mystery of mortality through the reanimation of dead tissue, his doomed romance with a famous but damaged actress, and ultimately his descent into madness. Zafon weaves a twisted tapestry of gothic horror, quickly paced, with intricate layers of carefully crafted stories within stories; allusions to Mary Shelley's Frankenstein abound. Whether describing the pointed arches and towering spires of postwar Spanish architecture, the gruesome visage of a resurrected corpse, or the intimate moments between a lonely boy and the best friend he's falling for, Zafon's writing moves gracefully from the macabre to the poignant and back again. shara l. hardeson

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