Irene Sola Canto Yo Y La Montana Baila

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Rating: ★★★★★ (5/5)

Canto yo y la montaña baila is not a book you finish and forget. It is a book that stays in your lungs like mountain air. Irene Solà has managed to write a novel that is simultaneously a ghost story, a botanical guide, a family saga, and a collection of poems. If you are looking for a reading experience that will alter your perception of the natural world, pick up this book. Let Irene Solà sing. Let the mountain dance. irene sola canto yo y la montana baila


Are you ready to listen to the mushrooms? If you enjoyed Canto yo y la montaña

Beneath the ecological and mythical layers lurks a historical wound. The landslide that threatens the town, known as the "Glera," is a direct consequence of the massive storms of 1962. However, Solà subtly weaves in the memory of the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939). The older characters remember the "traces of blood" in the snow and the men who fled into the woods. The mountain, in this sense, is a mass grave—not just of bodies, but of lost time. Are you ready to listen to the mushrooms

This historical depth elevates Canto yo y la montaña baila from a nature poem to a political act. Solà recovers the silenced voices of the Pyrenean valleys.

The novel feels like a campfire tale. There are references to rondalles (Catalan folk tales). The characters speak in dialogue that has no quotation marks, blurring the line between what is spoken and what is thought. Solà is recovering a pre-literary consciousness—where myths explain lightning, and ghosts explain the wind.