April afternoons have that mix between summer and winter, meaning that between the increasingly lengthening and luminous days, others break with rain that invite us to wait a little longer at home, hand in hand with a story that takes us into what’s happening out there, just across the wall from your room, in the neighbor’s house, in a coastal city that has nothing to do with the bustling life of big cities, other countries and other times. A tour without leaving your room.
I know the good books, those are the ones that hook you into the first paragraph and don’t let you leave the story until you finish them and you’re left with a run run in your head that lasts several days, thinking of those lives to you’ve had the privilege of peeking out, brooding over dialogue you never thought possible, concocting scenarios that you molded around your own memories. Books have that thing that no matter how much description there is on paper of a place you haven’t been, it’s you who form it based on similar images stored in the subconscious, something we also do to sometimes mechanically interact with the faces. of the characters, who are formed by the faces of people we have encountered, in a movie, on a record cover, in a painting or in life.
April afternoons arrive with literary novelties, so you can run to your trusty bookstore to buy new stories to accompany you on a subway ride, an afternoon soaking up the season’s first rays of sunshine, or one of those rainy evenings when you can curl up with the couch, a cup of hot coffee, and a book. be the solution to every problem. Romantic novels to fall in love with fiction, autobiographies, suspense or fiction, whatever your favorite genre, April comes with a new book for you. We tell you what all the literary novelties of the month are about reading. Take note!
España and Lulú meet crying alone in the Retiro. Two stories going through difficult times in her life, the first unsuccessfully pleasing a husband who does not reciprocate her and the second the untimely death of her mother.
Carolina’s life is no longer perfect after her divorce. The incessant fights with her daughter and her father’s terror don’t help either, but things change when she meets Gabriel, her mother’s lover and perhaps a murderer too.
A recently divorced woman lives in an urbanization in the middle of nowhere, focused on her work. His life is about to take a turn when he moves into an unfinished, unfinished, unsold urban house, a man who keeps a secret.
The novel moves to the 1930s in the midst of an economic crisis. During that time, a Jewish boy growing up in New York is confronted with the closed environment of the ghetto and the idiosyncrasies of his own family.
The path of motherhood has never been Rose’s favorite. But Luke, despite the fact that when he started dating Rose they never considered having kids, he absolutely wants them now. The idea of being a mother turns against her as she notices the social pressure and misunderstanding of her position.
A novel that overturns the memory of the author and her memories and the stories of her own family.
A love story set as the army occupies Northern Cyprus under a fig tree in which Kostas, a Christian Greek, and Defne, a Turkish Muslim, break down the cultural barriers that separate them.
The story begins with the disappearance of Spain’s most famous boy, Lucas, who has more than a million followers on social networks.
A thrilling novel that captivates you from the first pages and tells of the disappearance of Owen Michaels.
Source: Marie Claire