El préstamo de la difunta by Vicente Blasco Ibáñez
I picked up this slim volume by Vicente Blasco Ibáñez expecting one of his famous epics, but found something much more intimate and strangely moving instead.
The Story
The plot is simple but powerful. A man in Argentina comes into possession of the personal diary of a young Spanish woman who has recently died. Driven by curiosity, he begins to read it. Page by page, he is drawn into her world—her hopes, her secret struggles, her view on life. He learns about her family, her dreams, and the quiet disappointments she never voiced aloud. Without ever having met her, he forms a deep, one-sided bond. The story follows this unusual relationship as the man grapples with feelings of affection and loss for a perfect stranger, wondering about the life she led and the person she was.
Why You Should Read It
This book surprised me. It’s less about plot twists and more about a quiet emotional puzzle. Blasco Ibáñez asks a fascinating question: Can you fall in love with a soul through its traces? The man isn't haunted by a specter, but by a personality made real through handwriting. It makes you think about all the stories that are lost when someone dies, and the power writing has to bridge time. The writing is clear and vivid, pulling you right into the man's growing obsession. You feel his loneliness and his strange comfort in this posthumous friendship.
Final Verdict
This is a perfect book for a thoughtful afternoon. If you like character-driven stories, historical settings (it's steeped in early 20th-century atmosphere), or tales that explore grief and connection in unconventional ways, you'll find a lot here. It’s also a great, accessible entry point to Blasco Ibáñez's work if his bigger novels seem daunting. Just be warned: it might make you look at the old journals in your attic a little differently.
This title is part of the public domain archive. You can copy, modify, and distribute it freely.
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